May 12, 2008
Dusk On Earth
The Nation: The Planet Has Reached Its Tipping Point, And It's Time For A Hail Mary Pass
-
Photo
(CBS/iStockphoto)
-
Photo Essay
A Warming Effect
A behind-the-scenes look at the 60 Minutes team's trip to Patagonia, Chile and Antarctica.
-
Photo Essay
Earth Day 2008
A look at protests and observances around the world
Even for Americans, constitutionally convinced that there will always be a second act, and a third, and a do-over after that, and, if necessary, a little public repentance and forgiveness and a Brand New Start--even for us, the world looks a little Terminal right now.
It's not just the economy. We've gone through swoons before. It's that gas at $4 a gallon means we're running out, at least of the cheap stuff that built our sprawling society. It's that when we try to turn corn into gas, it sends the price of a loaf of bread shooting upwards and starts food riots on three continents. It's that everything is so inextricably tied together. It's that, all of a sudden, those grim Club of Rome types who, way back in the 1970s, went on and on about the "limits to growth" suddenly seem... how best to put it, right.
All of a sudden it isn't morning in America, it's dusk on planet Earth.
There's a number--a new number--that makes this point most powerfully. It may now be the most important number on Earth: 350. As in parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
A few weeks ago, our foremost climatologist, NASA's Jim Hansen, submitted a paper to Science magazine with several co-authors. The abstract attached to it argued--and I have never read stronger language in a scientific paper--"if humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on earth is adapted, paleoclimate evidence and ongoing climate change suggest that CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 385 ppm to at most 350 ppm." Hansen cites six irreversible tipping points--massive sea level rise and huge changes in rainfall patterns, among them--that we'll pass if we don't get back down to 350 soon; and the first of them, judging by last summer's insane melt of Arctic ice, may already be behind us.
So it's a tough diagnosis. It's like the doctor telling you that your cholesterol is way too high, and if you don't bring it down right away, you're going to have a stroke. So you take the pill, you swear off the cheese, and, if you're lucky, you get back into the safety zone before the coronary. It's like watching the tachometer edge into the red zone and knowing that you need to take your foot off the gas before you hear that clunk up front.
In this case, though, it's worse than that because we're not taking the pill and we are stomping on the gas--hard. Instead of slowing down, we're pouring on the coal, quite literally. Two weeks ago came the news that atmospheric carbon dioxide had jumped 2.4 parts per million last year--two decades ago, it was going up barely half that fast.
And suddenly, the news arrives that the amount of methane, another potent greenhouse gas, accumulating in the atmosphere, has unexpectedly begun to soar as well. Apparently, we've managed to warm the far north enough to start melting huge patches of permafrost and massive quantities of methane trapped beneath it have begun to bubble forth.
And don't forget: China is building more power plants, India is pioneering the $2,500 car, and Americans are converting to TVs the size of windshields that suck juice ever faster.
Here's the thing. Hansen didn't just say that, if we didn't act, there was trouble coming; or, if we didn't yet know what was best for us, we'd certainly be better off below 350 ppm of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. His phrase was: "...if we wish to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed." A planet with billions of people living near those oh-so- floodable coastlines. A planet with ever more vulnerable forests. (A beetle, encouraged by warmer temperatures, has already managed to kill ten times more trees this year than in any previous infestation across the northern reaches of Canada. This means far more carbon heading for the atmosphere, and apparently dooms Canada's efforts to comply with the Kyoto Protocol, already in doubt because of its decision to start producing oil for the US from Alberta's tar sands.)
We're the ones who kicked off the warming; now, the planet is starting to take over the job. Melt all that Arctic ice, for instance, and suddenly the nice white shield that reflected 80 percent of incoming solar radiation back into space has turned to blue water that absorbs 80 percent of the sun's heat. Such feedbacks are beyond history, though not in the sense that Francis Fukuyama had in mind.
And we have, at best, a few years to short-circuit them--to reverse course. Here's the Indian scientist and economist Rajendra Pachauri, who accepted the Nobel Prize on behalf of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change last year (and, by the way, got his job when the Bush Administration, at the behest of Exxon Mobil, forced out his predecessor): "If there's no action before 2012, that's too late. What we do in the next two to three years will determine our future. This is the defining moment."
By Bill McKibben
Reprinted with permission from The Nation.
| If you like this article, check out www.thenation.com for more investigative reports, timely editorials and incisive columns |




- 1
- 2
- next
See all 52 CommentsWe know that as Arctic ice gives way to Arctic ocean, its ability to absorb sunlight (i.e. accelerate Global Warming) goes up 5-fold.
We know that as Arctic ice give way over permafrost, the permafrost melts and degrades, releasing tons of methane, a potent greenhouse gas.
We know that humans have caused a 50% increase in CO2 content in the atmosphere, and that when climatologists put that factor into their model they not only match the temperature trend of the last 30 years, but match the observable effects occuring today.
This is human caused. But it may not be human reversible. We''re kicking off processes that could overwhelm our input, and take the planet in a direction we don''t what to go.
Eliminating most of civilization sounds like a good thing to me. It was not that long ago that we climbed out of the trees, walked through the brush and began to claim this rock as our own. I%u2019ve come to the conclusion that it happened too fast. A few centuries back into the Stone Age might be just the thing to teach %u201Cus%u201D our place.
Now, in case someone imagines that I%u2019m some sort of radical %u201Cgreenie,%u201D let me set the record straight. I%u2019m an anarchist, not an environmentalist. I frankly couldn%u2019t give a flip whether or not our species poisons itself. To me, it%u2019s all about the individual; the collective be damned.
On the other hand, I%u2019m as fond of the creature comforts technology provides as is anyone. So if we can find a way to control the climate, great. If not%u2026 well, the reason the phrase %u201CSo easy a cave man can do it%u201D is presumable funny is because we%u2019re STILL cavemen. We just wear better hides than before.
HOW MUCH HAVE OIL PRICES BEEN DRIVEN UP by - well - THE SAME THING???
Posted by VoidMaster
----------------------
Okay, so go kill yourself.
Hmm, don''t want to? Ruh-roh...
Most U.S. business travel is to overseas offices and factories that were built to house all the jobs that left. BRING THE JOBS BACK, and business travel goes down.
Massive oil is being consumed and converted to CO2 to ship products to this country THAT USED TO BE MADE HERE. BRING THE JOBS BACK, and shipping goes down.
Massive oil was consumed and converted to CO2 to BUILD ALL THOSE OFFICES AND FACTORIES. And now that the Chinese workers are demanding DECENT WAGES - factories in China are being moved to Vietnam and other countries WHERE PEOPLE ARE STILL DIRT CHEAP. MORE OIL will be consumed and converted to C02 to build a trail of abandoned factories as GLOBALIZATION keeps pursuing the motto "CHEAPER, EVER CHEAPER."
BRING THE JOBS BACK, and the problems go away.
Junk science is pushing their own selfish interests, including lucrative grants and the eco-industry that pushes us to produce biofuels and drive up food prices, starving people in poor countries. They ignore that we have record ice in Antartica this year. The polar bear populations has actually been increasing the last 10 years and the temperature have not been increasing. This is explained away as a short term anomoly. Everything that does not fit the model is ignored or excuses are made that it doesn''t mean anything.
Guess what? The planet does what it does and it is human arrogance to think we can do so much to change such massive natural systems.
Got a link or is that just your subjective opinion?
Posted by ubrew12
Glad you asked. Below is from a Canadian newspaper.
"If the polar bear is the 650-kilogram canary in the climate change coal mine, why are its numbers INCREASING?"
"The Inuit have always insisted the bears'' demise was greatly exaggerated by scientists doing projections based on fly-over counts, but their input was usually dismissed as the ramblings of self-interested hunters.
As Nunavut government biologist Mitch Taylor observed in a front-page story in the Nunatsiaq News last month, "the Inuit were right. There aren''t just a few more bears. There are a hell of a lot more bears."
Their widely portrayed lurch toward extinction on a steadily melting ice cap is not supported by bear counts in other Arctic regions either."
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=1ea8233f-14da-4a44-b839-b71a9e5df868
Also see:
"Between 1965 and 1970 the population of polar bears was estimated at only 8,000 - 10,000 and it was classified as an endangered species.
"the current population worldwide is now between 20,000 - 40,000."
http://www.ypte.org.uk/docs/factsheets/animal_facts/polar_bear.html
Maybe you''re seeing what you want to see.
Polar Bears International is a special interest advocacy group whose finances are directly dependent on donations. In fact making a donation is the first thing listed under "what you can do". They have cherry picked information that talks about population in a particular area, not their entire population range.
These days I am more likely to listen to the whole story from those who are more neutral in their interests. Take for example Forecast Principles. They evaluate such claims and related studies using tried and true scientific, investigative and predictive priciples. See link below. They take issue with the studies involved in much of the media push around the issue. They find them full of political bias andn lacking in scientific methodology.
If major policy decisions are to be made that effect our daily lives and our futures, then the studys upon which those decisions are made need to be based on sound scientific principles.
http://www.forecastingprinciples.com/Public_Policy/PolBears.pdf
additional atmospheric carbon dioxide given the severe limitations imposed by uncertainty about
the past and present climate and ignorance about relevant weather and climate processes. Indeed,
some climate modelers state that the GCMs do not provide forecasts. Here is a statement by one
of the lead authors of the IPCC%u2019s AR4:
%u2018%u2026there are no predictions by IPCC at all. And there never have been. The IPCC instead
proffers %u201Cwhat if%u201D projections of future climate that correspond to certain emissions scenarios.
There are a number of assumptions that go into these emissions scenarios. They are intended
to cover a range of possible self consistent %u201Cstory lines%u201D that then provide decision makers
with information about which paths might be more desirable.%u2019
(Written by Kevin Trenberth of the Climate Analysis Section, National Center for
Atmospheric Research, and posted on ClimateFeedback at nature.com on June 4, 2007.)"
http://www.forecastingprinciples.com/Public_Policy/PolBears.pdf
Since the current population of bears is not at a level that causes concern, the case for listing
depends upon forecasts of serious declines in bear numbers in decades to come. None of the
reports included references to scientific works on forecasting methods.
We found that the two reports that we judged most relevant to the listing decision made
assumptions where forecasts were required. Even if these assumptions had been valid, the bear
population forecasting procedures described in the reports contravened many important
forecasting principles."
http://www.forecastingprinciples.com/Public_Policy/PolBears.pdf
Ok, if this is the case, then you would be willing to drink untreated water from the Hudson river as it passes Manhattan, or Mississippi river water in Louisiana? How about a bottle of Detroit river water?
Posted by brianbwb
Actually that would be better than drinking the water from a river in the middle of a pristine rain forest. I would likely die of disentery within a few days if I did.
Regardless, my point was about global climate change and long term effects not sewer water. Even in that case did you notice the previously dreaded zebra muscle cleaned out Lake Erie pretty good from the sewer that it was.
You also missed my other posts about how the GW hype is detracting from attacking real pollution, such as *** in our rivers.
Instead our thinking has been:
Let''s see:
Al Gore, George Bush,
Al Gore, George Bush,
Al Gore, George Bush
Oh, I know that one name and I don''t like it that Bill Clinton was diddling in the oval office.
I''ll vote for the worst mistake in human history.
That''s right.
Good choice.
Hmmm, What''s that funny piece of paper that just fell on the floor.
get out there and vote and support democrats across the board this time.
mcbushsame, bush, even little mocoleo care more for
their ideology than they do for the rest of us, they
do not care if we all die, as long as we die christians, mindless christians.
McSame'' plan is the same as Bush''s, in spite of his
big talk express BS, he says the ''free markets'' will
solve the problem, right! thats how we got into this
mess. reublicons and thetr CON friends have destroyed
america, they are the real terroists
Definitely a "mouthpiece" for the Democrat party and all it''s "speical interests" groups.
Just another story from the most corrupt institution in America, our mostly liberal MSM wolfpack press.
And, as ususal, their trying to scare Americans with their "theories".
Really sad indeed...........
Act locally
Commit suicide to save the planet
Posted by hk94 at 09:48 PM : May 12, 2008btful.
The connection between global warming and human activity is today considered an established fact. There is no longer room for doubt. To dismiss the weight of this scientific consensus is to try to beat extremely long odds. I can only think you''re in denial or foolish.
Time to lose the SUVs, big house in the subsurbs, get off the fat buts and walk and bicycle. It will help our single payer health plan as well.
And the biggest moron of them all, George Bush and his administration have for years worked tirelessly to dampen the truth.
Makes me ill!
See http://www.wri.org/ecosystems
Posted by Oscarez
***
As long as %u201Cmakin%u2019 babies%u201D remains more popular than dying, a dramatic reduction in human population is more likely to be an effect of climate change than a means by which it is contained. Further, I suggest that a global collapse of civilization will result in a human population reduction to around 2 billion by the time it stabilizes. That%u2019s a bit more than a 50 percent reduction of current levels.
Posted by VoidMaster
----------------------
Ok
ay, so go kill yourself.
Hmm, don''''t want to? Ruh-roh...
***
Posted by hypnotoad72
***
I%u2019m not sure how or why someone killing himself would help with global warming. But then it%u2019s also clear that this idiot did not read (or maybe just did not comprehend) the rest of my post (go back 3 pages). My point -- which was very clear to the literate -- is that I am prepared for either outcome.
I can program a computer and I can chip a Clovis point (currently working on my Folsoms) and many, many things in between. I%u2019m ready to live comfortably within whatever environment emerges on this planet. Ultimately, the environmental impact on me will be to determine which of my many skills are survival oriented and which are mere hobbies.
Whether or not global warming is man-made is irrelevant. Whether or not our species has the ability to impact it; also irrelevant. Let us say for the sake of argument that humanity is able to effect climate change by some concerted effort. No way are we inclined toward the level of global cooperation that would be necessary. Plus, I rather suspect it%u2019s too late anyway.
Rising Sea levels? I live 950 feet above sea level so I don''t care.
How''d I do Rush?
If you have one person in a building the ac is pleasant if you have a 200 in that same room the air conditioning is too warm. We give off heat through our bodies, our ACs and everything else we touch how could we not be part of the problem and thats not even counting the effect the rest of our emissions
The geological record is full of mass extinctions. The difference is we will know what is happening to us and why.
Humans did not cause climate change. We just accelerated the process. It would have still happened within another thousand or so years anyway.
The connection between global warming and human activity is today considered an established fact.
-------------
Then why is MARS warming?
It has been observed for years now that the polar ice caps on the planet Mars have been melting - they have virtually disappeared now.
MARS IS GETTING WARMER - why?
DID HUMANS HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH IT???
There has been one controversial theory put forth that suggests that Mars is warming. A Russian scientist named Habibullo Abdussamatov presented it. And notably, Abdussamatov is not even a climatologist. The rest of the scientific community has not accepted his theory.
The lower gravity and dramatically lower atmospheric pressure of Mars is insufficient to retain water in liquid form. Thus, any time some of its water ice at its North Pole does melt, it almost immediately boils off into space. I suspect that much the same thing happens to CO2 ice, just at a much slower rate, since CO2 is heavier than H20.
Further, the meteorological dynamics of any other planet have nothing to do with those of Earth. So what happens with Mars%u2019 weather is not representative of what happens on Earth. The only possible exception will not occur for around another 5 billion years -- when the sun begins to swell into a red giant. At that point, global warming will take on a much more direct meaning on ALL of the planets of this solar system.
(A) a cold winter
(B) a hot summer
The answer is (A) by a huge margin.
So, why aren''t we doing everything we possibly can to promote and accelerate global warming until the two numbers are comparable?
That''s when our planet will have its ideal optimum temperature.
- 1
- 2
- next
See all 52 Comments