Dear Friends,
The following is quite germane to all agriculture right now:
Please note that the IPCC projections mentioned below DO NOT take into
account the possibility that the earth's climate can transition abruptly
into one of many "states". This is, increasingly, being viewed as a real
possibility given what we now know about the planet's climatic past. There
is evidence that, as recently as 11,000 years ago, the climate shifted
abruptly so as to vary by 16 degrees in as little as 10 years. - Norm Cimon
Update 20: December 11 , 2002-16
Copyright � 2002 Earth Policy Institute
GLOBAL TEMPERATURE NEAR RECORD FOR 2002
Takes Toll in Deadly Heat Waves, Withered Harvests, and Melting Ice
Lester R. Brown
Temperature data for the first 11 months of 2002 indicate that this year
will likely be the second warmest on record, exceeded only by 1998. These
data from the Goddard Institute for Space Studies indicate that the
temperature for the first 11 months has averaged 14.65 degrees Celsius
(58.37 degrees Fahrenheit), down slightly from the record high of 14.69 in
1998, but well above the average temperature of 14 degrees Celsius that
prevailed from 1951 to 1980.
Studying these annual temperature data, one gets the unmistakable feeling
that temperature is rising and that the rise is gaining momentum. A year
ago, we noted that the 15 warmest years since recordkeeping began in 1867
had occurred since 1980. Barring a dramatic drop in temperature for
December, we can now say that the three warmest years on record have come
in the last five years.
In addition to the longer-term annual temperature trend, recent monthly
data also indicate an accelerating rise. In contrast to local temperatures,
which fluctuate widely from season to season, the global average
temperature is remarkably stable throughout the year because the seasonal
contrasts of the northern and southern hemispheres offset each other. The
temperature for January of this year of 14.72 degrees Celsius was the
highest on record for January. The 14.91 degrees for March made it the
warmest March on record. And in seven of the next eight months April
through November the temperature was either the second or the third
warmest. October was the fourth warmest.
Since 1980, decadal average temperatures have risen well above the 14
degrees Celsius average for the span from 1951 to 1980, which is defined as
the norm. During the 1980s, the global temperature averaged 14.26 degrees.
In the 1990s it was 14.38 degrees. During the first three years of this
decade (2000-2002), it has been 14.52 degrees. (See data).
Rising temperature does not come as a surprise to atmospheric scientists
who analyze the climate effects of rising atmospheric levels of carbon
dioxide, the principal greenhouse gas. Each year since detailed
recordkeeping began in 1959, the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere has
climbed to a new high, making it one of the most predictable of all global
environmental trends.
The rise in atmospheric CO2 levels is the result of massive fossil fuel
burning that has simply overwhelmed nature's capacity to absorb carbon
dioxide. The temperature rises observed over the last two decades are in
line with the results of research using computerized global climate models
to project the effects of rising CO2 levels on the earth's climate.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a group of more than
1,500 of the world's leading climate scientists, reports that if
atmospheric CO2 levels continue to rise as projected, the earth's average
temperature will rise by 1.4-5.8 degrees Celsius during this century. The
lower end of the projected increases would lead to a 0.14 degree rise in
temperature per decade during this century, roughly the same as during each
of the last two decades of the last century. But the higher end of the
projected temperature range means an increase of nearly 0.6 degrees per
decade, a rate that could be extraordinarily disruptive to both the earth's
ecosystem and the economy that depends upon it.
There are many manifestations of a higher temperature other than
thermometer readings, including deadly heat waves, scorched crops, and ice
melting. In May 2002, a record heat wave in southern India with the
temperature reaching 114 degrees Fahrenheit (45.6 degrees C) claimed more
than 1,000 lives in the state of Andhra Pradesh alone. In societies without
air conditioning, there is no ready escape from the dangerous heat. To
India's north, the temperatures in Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan,
soared to 117 degrees Fahrenheit (47 degrees C) during June.
Farmers may now be facing higher temperatures than any generation of
farmers since agriculture began 11,000 years ago. Crop yields have fallen
as temperatures have climbed in key food-producing countries, such as the
United States and India. Many weeks of record or near-record temperatures
this past summer in the northern hemisphere, combined with low rainfall,
withered crops in many countries, and reduced the 2002 world grain harvest
to 1,813 million tons of grain, which was well below the projected
consumption of 1,895 million tons.
Crop ecologists at the International Rice Research Institute in the
Philippines have recently reported that rice fertilization falls from 100
percent at 34 degrees Celsius (93 degrees F) to essentially zero at 40
degrees (104 degrees F). Scientists in the U.S. Department of Agriculture
are seeing a similar effect of high temperature on other grains. The
scientific rule of thumb is that a 1 degree Celsius rise in temperature
above the optimum reduces grain yields by 10 percent.
One of the most sensitive indicators of higher temperature is ice melting.
Scientists now report ice melting in all the world's major mountain ranges,
including the Rocky Mountains, the Andes, the Alps, and the Himalayas. In
Alaska, where temperatures in some regions have risen 5-10 degrees Celsius
over the norm, ice is melting far faster than had earlier been reported.
On Africa's snow-covered Kilimanjaro, the area covered by snow and ice has
shrunk by 80 percent since 1900. Lonnie Thompson, Ohio State University
glaciologist, reports that all the snow and ice there may disappear by
2020. For Americans, another landmark Glacier National Park may be forced
to change its name. Half of its glaciers have already disappeared, and the
U.S. Geological Survey projects that the remaining ones will disappear
within the next 30 years.
Scientists report that ice cover in the Arctic Ocean shrank to 2 million
square miles this summer compared with an average of 2.4 million square
miles during the preceding 23 years. The thinning of the ice is proceeding
even faster. Since this ice is already in the water, its loss will not
affect sea level, but when incoming sunlight strikes snow and ice, 80
percent of it bounces back into space and 20 percent is converted to heat.
Conversely, when the incoming sunlight hits open water, only 20 percent is
reflected and 80 percent is converted into heat, warming the region.
Scientists are concerned with this warming because Greenland lies largely
within the Arctic Sea. This past summer ice melting occurred over 265,000
square miles of the Greenland ice sheet 9 percent more than the previous
maximum. If the Greenland ice sheet, which is 1.5 miles thick in some
areas, were to melt entirely, sea level would rise 7 meters (23 feet). What
happens to the ice in the Arctic Sea and the climate in the region is of
concern to the entire world.
Some industries are beginning to respond. Worried about the loss of snow in
mountainous regions and frustrated by the lack of progress in stabilizing
climate, the National Ski Areas Association, the U.S. trade association for
the industry, plans to soon announce its "Keep Winter Cool" campaign. To do
its part to reduce carbon emissions, the industry plans to purchase
wind-generated electricity to run lifts and snowmaking equipment. Other
sectors of the economy, such as agriculture and the insurance industry, may
also begin to press for a steep reduction in carbon emissions as the high
costs of failing to stabilize climate become unacceptable.
Changing the earth's climate is a serious matter, one that should not be
taken lightly. The risk is that climate change could soon spiral out of
control, leaving future generations with soaring temperatures, withered
harvests, deadly heat waves, melting ice, and rising seas. If we do not act
quickly to stabilize climate, our grandchildren may never forgive us.
Copyright � 2002 Earth Policy Institute
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
From Earth Policy Institute
Lester R. Brown, Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth (New York:
W.W. Norton & Company, 2001).
Lester R. Brown, Janet Larsen, and Bernie Fischlowitz-Roberts, The Earth
Policy Reader (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2002).
Lester R. Brown, "Rising Temperatures & Falling Water Tables Raising Food
Prices," Eco-Economy Update, 21 August 2002.
Lester R. Brown, "Earth's Ice Melting Faster Than Projected," Eco-Economy
Update, 12 March 2002.
From Other Sources
Seth Dunn, "Global Temperature Close to a Record" and "Carbon Emissions
Reach New High," in Worldwatch Institute, Vital Signs 2002: The Trends that
are Shaping Our Future (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2002), pp. 50-53.
Goddard Institute for Space Studies, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Earth
Sciences Directorate, Global Temperature Anomalies in .01 C, updated
December 2002, http://www.giss.nasa.gov/data.
IPCC, Climate Change 2001. Contributions of Working Groups I, II, and II to
the Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press). Text and
summaries available at http://www.ipcc.ch.
C.D. Keeling, T.P. Whorf, and the Carbon Dioxide Research Group,
Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Record from Mauna Loa, Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, University of California, 13 June 2002,
http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov/ftp/ndp001/maunaloa.co2.
LINKS
Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center
http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
http://www.ipcc.ch
International Research Institute for Climate Prediction
http://iri.ldeo.columbia.edu/climate/cid/index.html
National Climatic Data Center
http://lwf.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/ncdc.html
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
http://www.noaa.gov
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
http://www.sio.ucsd.edu
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
http://www.unfccc.de
--
With kindest regards,
Barry Carter
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
2319 Balm
Baker City, Oregon 97814
Phone: 541-523-3357
Web Pages:
Forest - http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/bmnfa/index.htm
ORMUS - http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/whatisit.htm
"What you think upon grows. Whatever you allow to occupy your mind you
magnify in your life. Whether the subject of your thought be good or bad,
the law works and the condition grows. Any subject that you keep out of
your mind tends to diminish in your life, because what you do not use
atrophies. The more you think of grievances, the more such trials you will
continue to receive; the more you think of the good fortune you have had,
the more good fortune will come to you."
--Emmet Fox
- Re: Other than Jeavons? Allan Balliett
- Re: Other than Jeavons? Fred & Rose Lieberman
- Re: Other than Jeavons... Liz Davis
- Re: Other than Jeavons? Merla Barberie
- Re: Other than Jeavons? Rambler Flowers LTD
- Re: Other than Jeavons? PAT MCGAULEY
- Re: Other than Jeavons... Cheryl Kemp
- Re: Other than Jeavons... PAT MCGAULEY
- Re: Other than Jeavons... Allan Balliett
- FWD: [Poclad] Industry's "Poor... Barry Carter
- Re: WENDELL BERRY: The Agrarian Standard Barry Carter
- Re: WENDELL BERRY: The Agrarian Standard Terrafutura
