http://www.fortune.com/fortune/technology/articles/0,15114,582584-1,00.html

Global warming may be bad news for future generations, but let's face
it, most of us spend as little time worrying about it as we did about
al Qaeda before 9/11. Like the terrorists, though, the seemingly
remote climate risk may hit home sooner and harder than we ever
imagined. In fact, the prospect has become so real that the Pentagon's
strategic planners are grappling with it.

The threat that has riveted their attention is this: Global warming,
rather than causing gradual, centuries-spanning change, may be pushing
the climate to a tipping point. Growing evidence suggests the
ocean-atmosphere system that controls the world's climate can lurch
from one state to another in less than a decade�like a canoe that's
gradually tilted until suddenly it flips over. Scientists don't know
how close the system is to a critical threshold. But abrupt climate
change may well occur in the not-too-distant future. If it does, the
need to rapidly adapt may overwhelm many societies�thereby upsetting
the geopolitical balance of power.

Though triggered by warming, such change would probably cause cooling
in the Northern Hemisphere, leading to longer, harsher winters in much
of the U.S. and Europe. Worse, it would cause massive droughts,
turning farmland to dust bowls and forests to ashes. Picture last
fall's California wildfires as a regular thing. Or imagine similar
disasters destabilizing nuclear powers such as Pakistan or Russia�it's
easy to see why the Pentagon has become interested in abrupt climate
change.

Climate researchers began getting seriously concerned about it a
decade ago, after studying temperature indicators embedded in ancient
layers of Arctic ice. The data show that a number of dramatic shifts
in average temperature took place in the past with shocking speed�in
some cases, just a few years.

The case for angst was buttressed by a theory regarded as the most
likely explanation for the abrupt changes. The eastern U.S. and
northern Europe, it seems, are warmed by a huge Atlantic Ocean current
that flows north from the tropics�that's why Britain, at Labrador's
latitude, is relatively temperate. Pumping out warm, moist air, this
"great conveyor" current gets cooler and denser as it moves north.
That causes the current to sink in the North Atlantic, where it heads
south again in the ocean depths. The sinking process draws more water
from the south, keeping the roughly circular current on the go.

But when the climate warms, according to the theory, fresh water from
melting Arctic glaciers flows into the North Atlantic, lowering the
current's salinity�and its density and tendency to sink. A warmer
climate also increases rainfall and runoff into the current, further
lowering its saltiness. As a result, the conveyor loses its main
motive force and can rapidly collapse, turning off the huge heat pump
and altering the climate over much of the Northern Hemisphere.

Scientists aren't sure what caused the warming that triggered such
collapses in the remote past. (Clearly it wasn't humans and their
factories.) But the data from Arctic ice and other sources suggest the
atmospheric changes that preceded earlier collapses were dismayingly
similar to today's global warming. As the Ice Age began drawing to a
close about 13,000 years ago, for example, temperatures in Greenland
rose to levels near those of recent decades. Then they abruptly
plunged as the conveyor apparently shut down, ushering in the "Younger
Dryas" period, a 1,300-year reversion to ice-age conditions. (A dryas
is an Arctic flower that flourished in Europe at the time.)

Though Mother Nature caused past abrupt climate changes, the one that
may be shaping up today probably has more to do with us. In 2001 an
international panel of climate experts concluded that there is
increasingly strong evidence that most of the global warming observed
over the past 50 years is attributable to human activities�mainly the
burning of fossil fuels such as oil and coal, which release
heat-trapping carbon dioxide. Indicators of the warming include
shrinking Arctic ice, melting alpine glaciers, and markedly earlier
springs at northerly latitudes. A few years ago such changes seemed
signs of possible trouble for our kids or grandkids. Today they seem
portents of a cataclysm that may not conveniently wait until we're
history.

Accordingly, the spotlight in climate research is shifting from
gradual to rapid change. In 2002 the National Academy of Sciences
issued a report concluding that human activities could trigger abrupt
change. Last year the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland,
included a session at which Robert Gagosian, director of the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, urged policymakers to
consider the implications of possible abrupt climate change within two
decades.

Such jeremiads are beginning to reverberate more widely. Billionaire
Gary Comer, founder of Lands' End, has adopted abrupt climate change
as a philanthropic cause. Hollywood has also discovered the issue�next
summer 20th Century Fox is expected to release The Day After Tomorrow,
a big-budget disaster movie starring Dennis Quaid as a scientist
trying to save the world from an ice age precipitated by global
warming.

Fox's flick will doubtless be apocalyptically edifying. But what would
abrupt climate change really be like?





xponent

Scenario Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to