Air Temperatures – The following high temperatures (F) were recorded across the state of Hawaii Friday…along with the low temperatures Friday:

80 66  Lihue, Kauai
80 – 68  Honolulu, Oahu
8462 
Molokai
86
68  Kahului AP, Maui
82 70  Kona Int’l AP
84 –
66  Hilo AP, Hawaii

Here are the latest 24-hour precipitation totals (inches) for each of the islands as of Friday evening:

0.01  Lihue, Kauai
0.61  Palolo Fire Station, Oahu
0.00  Molokai
0.00  L
anai
0.00  Kahoolawe
1.09  Ulupalakua, Maui
0.35  Keaumo, Big Island

The following numbers represent the strongest wind gusts (mph) as of Friday evening:

22  Moloaa Dairy, Kauai
23  Makua Range, Oahu
13  Molokai
14  Lanai
17  Kahoolawe
18  Maalaea Bay, Maui
22  South Point, Big Island

Hawaii’s MountainsHere’s a link to the live webcam on the summit of our tallest mountain Mauna Kea (nearly 13,800 feet high) on the Big Island of Hawaii. This webcam is available during the daylight hours here in the islands, and at night whenever there’s a big moon shining down. Also, at night you will be able to see the stars — and the sunrise and sunset too — depending upon weather conditions.


Aloha Paragraphs

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Low pressure centers are active well north of Hawaii

http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/west/cpac/vis.jpg
The next comma shaped cold front is approaching Hawaii to the northwest

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Clear to partly cloudy…with clouds approaching the state from the west

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Showers few and far between
Looping radar image


~~~ Hawaii Weather Narrative
~~~

 

Gale Warning…offshore waters beyond 40 nautical miles

Small Craft Advisory…waters around Kauai



A surface ridge of high pressure over Maui County is bringing gentle east-southeast winds into the Big Island, variable light breezes to Maui County…and southerly breezes from Kauai to Oahu.
Some volcanic haze (vog), will continue over the smaller islands this weekend, as the winds carry it from the Big Island vents towards the rest of the state. Atmospheric soundings from Hilo and Lihue both continue to show lingering mid-level instability (colder air aloft). However, a temperature inversion, and an extremely dry atmosphere above the inversion…have prevented much rainfall.

A cold front located west of Kauai, is moving steadily toward the islands, and will reach Kauai sometime Saturday afternoon…and then stall near Oahu Sunday. This will bring increasing clouds and showers to Kauai Saturday, and then Oahu Saturday afternoon and evening, while partly cloudy skies are expected over Maui County and the Big Island. The cold front will dissipate through Sunday, with leftover low clouds and spotty showers lingering over the western islands.

Looking ahead into early next week, models are indicating a deep, moist southwest kona flow…with a second cold front reaching Kauai Tuesday. This next front will add more tropical moisture to atmosphere of the islands, as well as an associated upper level trough of low pressure, in turn adding instability aloft. Conditions will remain unsettled from Tuesday through the end of the week, with periods of wet weather and cloudy skies. Dew points will remain rather high into next week as well, keeping muggy conditions in place…and well as volcanic haze.

Here’s a wind profile of the Pacific Ocean – Closer view of the islands / Here’s the vog forecast animation / Here’s the latest weather map

Marine environment details: The western end of a surface ridge is over the central portion of the island chain, supporting light winds along it’s axis, light to moderate east to southeast winds near the Big Island, and moderate southerly winds near Kauai. The ridge will move east later tonight, in response to an approaching cold front west of Kauai…with south winds briefly becoming locally strong near Kauai tonight. Although the front is expected to produce a brief period of gale force winds and isolated thunderstorms in the north portion of the Hawaiian Offshore Waters overnight, it is expected to be much weaker when it reaches the islands, and significant marine impacts are not expected.

The forward motion of the weakening cold front is expected to slow as it approaches, reaching Kauai by Saturday night before stalling and gradually dissipating near Kauai and Oahu through Sunday. Light and variable winds are expected Sunday through early next week as the ridge noses back in from the east, and another ridge moves in from the west. Another high pressure system building to the northwest of the area may push another cold front toward the islands Tuesday-Wednesday.

Surf will be small through Saturday, although a somewhat unusual, although small wind swell will affect leeward shores. A west-northwest swell this weekend will likely lead to advisory level surf along exposed north and west facing shores, including the west facing shores of the Big Island. This swell is expected to build late Saturday, peak Sunday, and gradually diminish Monday and Tuesday. A moderate north-northwest swell is possible around the middle of next week.

 

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Muggy weather…with an extended period of volcanic haze coming up

Southern California Weather Summary: An approaching cold front will produce cooler onshore flow and dense coastal fog tonight…along with increased cloudiness Saturday. Expect light rain to begin falling on the central coast Saturday night, and spreading through all areas to the south by Sunday morning. High pressure will bring a sharp warming trend to the area early next week…with high temperatures well above normal by mid-week.

http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/west/wfo/lox/cvis.jpg

Increasing clouds from the west



World-wide tropical cyclone activity


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>>> Atlantic Ocean: The 2017 hurricane season begins June 1st

Here’s a satellite image of the Atlantic Ocean

>>> Caribbean: The 2017 hurricane season begins June 1st

>>> Gulf of Mexico: The 2017 hurricane season begins June 1st

Here’s a satellite image of the Caribbean Sea…and the Gulf of Mexico

Here’s the link to the National Hurricane Center (NHC)

>>> Eastern Pacific: The 2017 hurricane season begins May 15th

Here’s the NOAA 2016 Hurricane Season Summary for the Eastern Pacific Basin

Here’s a wide satellite image that covers the entire area between Mexico, out through the central Pacific…to the International Dateline.

Here’s the link to the National Hurricane Center (NHC)

>>>
Central Pacific
: The 2017 hurricane season begins June 1st

Here’s the NOAA 2016 Hurricane Season Summary for the Central Pacific Basin

Here’s a link to the Central Pacific Hurricane Center (CPHC)

>>> Northwest Pacific Ocean: No active tropical cyclones

>>> South Pacific Ocean: No active tropical cyclone


>>>
North and South Indian Oceans / Arabian Sea: 

Tropical Cyclone 09S (Enawo) remains active in the South Indian Ocean, here’s a graphical track map, along with a satellite image of the system…and what the computer models are showing.

Here’s a link to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC)


Interesting:
Robots won’t just take our jobs they’ll make the rich even richer Should robots pay taxes? –
It may sound strange, but a number of prominent people have been asking this question lately. As fears about the impact of automation grow, calls for a “robot tax” are gaining momentum. Earlier this month, the European parliament considered one for the EU. Benoît Hamon, the French Socialist party presidential candidate who is often described as his country’s Bernie Sanders, has put a robot tax in his platform. Even Bill Gates recently endorsed the idea.

The proposals vary, but they share a common premise. As machines and algorithms get smarter, they’ll replace a widening share of the workforce. A robot tax could raise revenue to retrain those displaced workers, or supply them with a basic income.

The good news is that the robot apocalypse hasn’t arrived just yet. Despite a steady stream of alarming headlines about clever computers gobbling up our jobs, the economic data suggests that automation isn’t happening on a large scale. The bad news is that if it does, it will produce a level of inequality that will make present-day America look like an egalitarian utopia by comparison.

The real threat posed by robots isn’t that they will become evil and kill us all, which is what keeps Elon Musk up at night – it’s that they will amplify economic disparities to such an extreme that life will become, quite literally, unlivable for the vast majority. A robot tax may or may not be a useful policy tool for averting this scenario. But it’s a good starting point for an important conversation. Mass automation presents a serious political problem – one that demands a serious political solution.

Automation isn’t new. In the late 16th century, an English inventor developed a knitting machine known as the stocking frame. By hand, workers averaged 100 stitches per minute; with the stocking frame, they averaged 1,000. This is the basic pattern, repeated through centuries: as technology improves, it reduces the amount of labor required to produce a certain number of goods.

So far, however, this phenomenon hasn’t produced extreme unemployment. That’s because automation can create jobs as well as destroy them. One recent example is bank tellers: ATMs began to appear in the 1970s, but the total number of tellers has actually grown since then. As ATMs made it cheaper to run a branch, banks opened more branches, leading to more tellers overall. The job description has changed –today’s tellers spend more time selling financial services than dispensing cash – but the jobs are still there.

What’s different this time is the possibility that technology will become so sophisticated that there won’t be anything left for humans to do. What if your ATM could not only give you a hundred bucks, but sell you an adjustable-rate mortgage? While the current rhetoric around artificial intelligence is over-hyped, there have been meaningful advances over the past several years. And it’s not inconceivable that much bigger breakthroughs are on the horizon. Instead of merely transforming work, technology might begin to eliminate it. Instead of making it possible to create more wealth with less labor, automation might make it possible to create more wealth without labor.

What’s so bad about wealth without labor? It depends on who owns the wealth. Under capitalism, wages are how workers receive a portion of what they produce. That portion has always been small, relative to the rewards that flow to the owners of capital. And over the past several decades, it’s gotten smaller: the share of the national income that goes to wages has been steadily shrinking, while the share that goes to capital has been growing. Technology has made workers more productive, but the profits have trickled up, not down. Productivity increased by 80.4% between 1973 and 2011, but the real hourly compensation of the median worker went up by only 10.7%.

As bad as this is, mass automation threatens to make it much worse. If you think inequality is a problem now, imagine a world where the rich can get richer all by themselves. Capital liberated from labor means not merely the end of work, but the end of the wage. And without the wage, workers lose their only access to wealth – not to mention their only means of survival. They also lose their primary source of social power. So long as workers control the point of production, they can shut it down. The strike is still the most effective weapon workers have, even if they rarely use it any more. A fully automated economy would make them not just redundant, but powerless.

Meanwhile, robotic capital would enable elites to completely secede from society. From private jets to private islands, the rich already devote a great deal of time and expense to insulating themselves from other people. But even the best fortified luxury bunker is tethered to the outside world, so long as capital needs labor to reproduce itself. Mass automation would make it possible to sever this link. Equipped with an infinite supply of workerless wealth, elites could seal themselves off in a gated paradise, leaving the unemployed masses to rot.

If that scenario isn’t bleak enough, consider the possibility that mass automation could lead not only to the impoverishment of working people, but to their annihilation. In his book Four Futures, Peter Frase speculates that the economically redundant hordes outside the gates would only be tolerated for so long. After all, they might get restless – and that’s a lot of possible pitchforks. “What happens if the masses are dangerous but are no longer a working class, and hence of no value to the rulers?” Frase writes. “Someone will eventually get the idea that it would be better to get rid of them.” He gives this future an appropriately frightening name: “exterminism”, a world defined by the “genocidal war of the rich against the poor”.

These dystopias may sound like science fiction, but they’re perfectly plausible given our current trajectory. The technology around robotics and artificial intelligence will continue to improve – but without substantive political change, the outcome will range from bad to apocalyptic for most people. That’s why the recent rumblings about a robot tax are worth taking seriously. They offer an opportunity to develop the political response to mass automation now, before it’s too late.

When I asked the prominent left wing thinker Matt Bruenig for his thoughts, he explained that whatever we do, we shouldn’t try to discourage automation. “The problem with robots is not the manufacturing and application of them – that’s actually good for productivity,” he told me. “The problem is that they are owned by the wealthy, which means that the income that flows to the robots go out to a small slice of wealthy people.”

Job-killing robots are good, in other words, so long as the prosperity they produce is widely distributed. An Oxfam report released earlier this year revealed that the eight richest men in the world own as much wealth as half the human race. Imagine what those numbers will look like if automation accelerates. At some point, a handful of billionaires could control close to one hundred percent of society’s wealth. Then, perhaps, the idea that wealth should be owned by the many, rather than monopolized by the few, won’t seem so radical, and we can undertake a bit of sorely needed redistribution – before robot capitalism kills us all.