Sunday, July 15, 2012

Ignore global warming at own cost :- 13.6.12 - The Pioneer


The small damages that we are doing to planet earth on a daily basis are adding up to a  catastrophe that is waiting to happen. But we don’t care simply because we don’t believe that life on the planet is going to die out any time soon.
The forthcoming United Nations  Conference on Sustainable  Development in Rio de Janeiro  (Rio+20) between June 20 and June  22 has brought out the usual warnings  of environmental doom. They  have been greeted with the usual  indifference: After all, there are seven  billion of us now, and we’re all still eating.  What could possibly go wrong?  The UN Environment  Programme published its five-yearly  Global Environmental Outlook  (GEO-5) saying that significant  progress has been made on only four  of 90 environmental goals that were  adopted at the Rio Earth Summit in  1992. “If current patterns of production  and consumption of natural  resources prevail”, warned UNEP  head Achim Steiner, “then  Governments will preside over  unprecedented levels of damage and  degradation.” Yawn.  Meanwhile, a team of respected  scientists warn that life on Earth  may be on the way to an irreversible  “tipping point”. Sure. Heard that one  before, too.  Last week, one of the world’s two  leading scientific journals, Nature,  published a paper, ‘Approaching a  state shift in Earth’s biosphere’, pointing  out that more than 40 per cent of  the Earth’s land is already used for  human needs. With the human population  set to grow by a further two  billion by 2050, that figure could soon  exceed 50 per cent.  “It really will be a new world, biologically,  at that point,” said the  paper’s lead author, professor  Anthony Barnofsky of the University  of California, Berkeley. But Mr  Barnofsky doesn’t go into the details  of what kind of new world it might  be. Scientists hardly ever do in public,  for fear of being seen as panicmongers.  Besides, it’s a relatively  new hypothesis, but it’s a pretty convincing  one, and it should be more  widely understood. Here’s how bad  it could get.  The scientific consensus is that we  are still on track for three degrees centigrade  of warming (five degrees fahrenheit)  by 2100, but that’s just warming  caused by human greenhouse-gas  emissions. The problem is that +3  degrees is well past the point where the  major feedbacks kick in: Natural phenomena  triggered by our warming, like  melting permafrost and the loss of  Arctic sea-ice cover, that will add to the  heating and that we cannot turn off.  The trigger is actually around two  degrees C (3.5 degrees F) higher average  global temperature. After that we  lose control of the process: Ending  our own carbon-dioxide emissions  would no longer be enough to stop  the warming. We may end up trapped  on an escalator heading up to +6  degrees C (+10.5 degrees F), with no  way of getting off. And +6 degrees C  gives you the mass extinction.  There have been five mass extinctions  in the past 500 million years,  when 50 per cent or more of the  species then existing on the Earth  vanished, but until recently the only  people taking any interest in this were  paleontologists, not climate scientists.  They did wonder what had caused  the extinctions, but the best answer  they could come up was “climate  change”. It wasn’t a very good answer.  Why would a warmer or colder  planet kill off all those species?  The warming was caused by massive  volcanic eruptions dumping  huge quantities of carbon-dioxide in  the atmosphere for tens of thousands  of years. But it was very gradual  and the animals and plants had  plenty of time to migrate to climatic  zones that still suited them.  (That’s exactly what happened more  recently in the Ice Age, as the glaciers  repeatedly covered whole continents  and then retreated again.)  There had to be a more convincing  kill mechanism than that, and  the paleontologists found one when  they discovered that a giant asteroid  struck the planet 65 million years ago,  just at the time when the dinosaurs  died out in the most recent of the  great extinctions. So they went looking  for evidence of huge asteroid  strikes at the time of the other  extinction events. They found none.  What they discovered was that  there was indeed major warming at  the time of all the other extinctions  — and that the warming had radically  changed the oceans. The currents  that carry oxygen-rich cold  water down to the depths shifted so  that they were bringing down oxygen-  poor warm water instead, and  gradually the depths of the oceans  became anoxic: the deep waters no  longer had any oxygen.  When that happens, the sulfur  bacteria that normally live in the silt  (because oxygen is poison to them)  come out of hiding and begin to multiply.  Eventually they rise all the way  to the surface over the whole ocean,  killing all the oxygen-breathing life.  The ocean also starts emitting enormous  amounts of lethal hydrogen sulfide  gas that destroy the ozone layer  and directly poison land-dwelling  species. This has happened many  times in the Earth’s history.  Don’t let it worry you. We’ll all  be safely dead long before it could  happen again: The earliest possible  date for a mass extinction, assuming  that the theory is right and that  we continue down our present  track with emissions, would be  well into the next century. 

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