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http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Sept05/Gilardin0921.htm

Apocalypse Now: How Mankind Is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth
by Maria Gilardin
September 21, 2005

This headline appeared in the London Independent in early February of
2005, following a conference at the Hadley Centre in Exeter, England,
where 200 of the world’s leading scientists issued the most urgent warning
to date: that dangerous climate change is taking place today, and not the
day after tomorrow.

Floods, storms, and droughts. Melting polar ice, shrinking glaciers,
oceans turning to acid. Scientists from the fields of glaciology, biology,
meteorology, oceanography, and ecology reported seeing a dramatic rise
over the last 50 years of all the indicators of climate change: increase
in average world temperatures, extreme weather events, in the levels of
CO2 and other greenhouse gases, and in the level of the oceans.

The award winning environmental writer Geoffrey Lean wrote: “Future
historians, looking back from a much hotter and less hospitable world . .
. will puzzle over how a whole generation could have sleepwalked into
disaster -- destroying the climate that has allowed human civilization to
flourish over the past 11,000 years.”

The overwhelming majority of scientists and international climate
monitoring bodies now agree that climate change is taking place, that
humans are responsible, and that time is running out. In fact, we could
reach “the point of no return” in a decade, reported Lean.

Melting glaciers all across the world include: the Broggi in the Peruvian
Andes, Glacier Ururashraju in the Cordillera Blanca of Peru, the Pasterze
in Austria, Portage Glacier near Anchorage, Alaska, Mount Hood in Oregon,
Mount Kilimanjaro in northeastern Tanzania, the Grinnell Glacier in
Glacier National Park, and the Rhone Glacier in Switzerland.

The earth is getting warmer. While average warming is just under 1 degree
Celsius worldwide, the Polar Regions show warming of 2 to 3 degrees
Celsius, due to feedback effects. With the melt of white snow, that
previously reflected some of the heat back into the atmosphere (albedo
effect), newly exposed darker surfaces absorb heat, and accelerate melting
of more ice and snow.

A world average warming of under 1 degree Celsius may seem small. However,
historically, the difference between warm periods and an ice age has been
only 5 to 6 degrees Celsius. The transformation from the last ice age to
the present climate resulted from a slow rise in temperature, which took
5,000 years to fully complete, allowing life on Earth to adapt to the
changes. We could bring about a 5- to 6- degree change in only 150 years
if we don’t start constraining the use of fossil fuels.

It is not only the fundamental change in the composition of air, water,
and soil that we need to consider. The speed at which these changes are
forced upon the planet already leads to high extinction rates.

Scientists at the Exeter meeting agreed that warming over 2 degrees
Celsius above pre-industrial temperatures would be dangerous -- and we are
almost half way there. To burn up the world’s remaining coal reserves,
they estimated, would raise the average temperature by 3 to 8 degrees C in
less than 150 years.

Quite a few climate “skeptics”, fossil fuel executives, and members of the
Bush administration are still denying that there is such a thing as
human-caused global warming. Many of them claim that the sun has just
grown hotter. However, a warmer sun would have heated the stratosphere as
well. In contrast, the stratosphere is cooling -- suggesting a blanket of
greenhouse gases that prevents the earth’s heat from radiating back into
space.

We know how the greenhouse effect works. Venus, with a thick greenhouse
cover is hot; Mars, with a thin greenhouse is cold. Earth’s blanket of
greenhouse gases is made up of the byproducts of the industrial age and an
outdated Victorian technology. Even though methane is a more powerful
greenhouse gas, it is CO2 that makes up over 80% of the greenhouse gas
mix. Ice core studies show that CO2 concentrations on this planet had been
stable for the last millennium, never rising or falling more than 10 ppm,
and fluctuating between 275 and 285 ppm. Now CO2 concentrations are
beginning to exceed 370 ppm, and are rising from year to year. Other
greenhouse gases show the same dramatic increase -- mainly in the past 40
to 50 years. We are already living under a dome of air that no one has
breathed in a million years.


Ocean Warming and Acidification

The average temperature of the surface waters of the oceans, extending to
a depth of several hundred meters, has risen by a 1/2 degree Celsius. This
has occurred in just the past 40 years. The oceans have also become more
acidic, due to the uptake of anthropogenic CO2. The Plymouth Marine
Laboratory in England estimates that 48% of fossil-fuel CO2, or 400
billion tons, have been absorbed by the oceans, making them the largest
reservoir of carbon, a load greater than that borne by the atmosphere or
the earth. CO2, while more inert in the atmosphere, becomes highly
reactive in oceans, leading to physical, biological, and geological
changes.

Carol Turley, head of science at the Plymouth Marine Laboratory, warns
that no such ph changes in oceans have occurred in the past 20 million
years, and that the capacity of oceans to take up CO2 is limited.

What might the consequences of such changes in the oceans be? An August
2005 article in the Globe and Mail, on starving sea birds washing up on
Pacific coast beaches from California to British Columbia, reports that
scientists believe that, at least for this year, the “bottom has fallen
out of the coastal food chain.” Off the Oregon coast, the waters near the
shore are 5 to 7 degrees warmer than normal. A layer of warm water along
the whole Pacific coastline prevents the usual upwelling of cool water
rich in phytoplankton, the base of the food web for all marine life.

Zooplankton, such as krill, depend on phytoplankton. The disappearance of
zooplankton in turn affects seabirds and fish from sardines to whales.
NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, found a 20 to
30 per cent drop in juvenile salmon off the coasts of Oregon, Washington,
and British Columbia; and monitoring in Central and Northern California
shows the lowest number of juvenile rockfish in more than 20 years.

The world has not yet felt the real impact of global warming since the
oceans have absorbed so much heat and CO2. The US National Center for
Atmospheric Research (NCAR) put out two studies in March 2005. They
suggest that due to the thermal inertia of the oceans global temperatures
and sea levels will continue to rise for the next 100 years - even if
greenhouse gas emissions come under control.


First Signs of a Gulf Stream Collapse

The opening presentations at the Exeter, UK conference gave the most
comprehensive assessment of so-called “wild cards”, climate change events
that risk feedback loops no longer responsive to human intervention. The
run-away events, or ecological landslides include accelerated melting of
the enormous ice sheets of Antarctica and Greenland, as well as the
decline and possible reversal of the Gulf Stream that conveys heat from
the tropics to Europe.

In the Hollywood movie “The Day After Tomorrow,” the Gulf Stream stops
flowing in a matter of days, creating an instant ice age on the Atlantic
coast and Western Europe. Scientists at Exeter said it would take at least
ten years for such an event to unfold and a few hundred years to set up
the conditions. But they warned that the Thermohaline Circulation, as they
call the Gulf Stream, has stopped flowing before -- and that we have
already a greater than 50% likelihood of a shutdown if we do not enact
strict climate policies.

The amount of heat transported North by the Gulf Stream, which keeps
Western Europe 5 to 10 degrees Celsius warmer than it would normally be at
its latitude, equals one million billion watts -- sufficient to satisfy
the energy needs of 100 Earths. Even a partial failure of the Gulf Stream
would have huge consequences.

The Gulf Stream picks up heat from the equatorial sun. Driven by warmth,
the stream flows northeast towards Europe and the Greenland ice sheets,
where the water cools and sinks. The cooler and saltier the water, the
stronger the sinking motion. Dense cool and salty water from the Gulf
Stream then flows back to the tropics at a deeper ocean level.

As the Polar Regions and the oceans are warming, melt-water from ice
sheets and glaciers is changing the salinity of the ocean. A combination
of the rising ocean surface temperature, and the decreasing salinity,
already visibly changes the movement of sea currents that depend on
differences in warmth and coolness, and the weight that higher salinity
adds to the water as the driving force.

Large-scale salinity changes in the Arctic and sub-Arctic Seas were
reported in June 2005, in the journal Science. Ruth Curry from the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution on Cape Cod, in Massachusetts, analyzed
temperature, salinity, and density data, collected in the North Atlantic
Ocean over the last 55 years. Curry warned that excessive amounts of
freshwater dumped into the North Atlantic could affect the flow of the
Gulf Stream.

We know, from ice-core data, when the Gulf Stream has stopped flowing
before. The most recent collapse, 15,000 years ago during the Younger
Dryas, was caused by the sweetening of the North Atlantic Ocean, when
glaciers covering North America melted and began flowing through the St.
Lawrence waterway into the Atlantic, instead of into the Gulf of Mexico
via the Mississippi. Today’s accelerated melting of the Arctic and
Antarctic ice sheets may recreate these conditions, not just for the Gulf
Stream but also for other parts of the global ocean circulation.

In May of this year, the London Times reported that first signs of a slow
down of the Gulf Stream had been detected by a Cambridge University
researcher, who hitches rides on a Royal Navy submarine to one of the
three areas where the Gulf Stream reverses its course. Peter Wadhams said
that “until recently we could find giant ‘chimneys’ in the sea where
columns of cold, dense water were sinking from the surface to the seabed
3,000 meters below, but now they have almost disappeared.”

Off the coast of Greenland, the Odden Ice Shelf once grew out into the
Greenland Sea every winter, and receded in the summer. The Odden triggered
the annual formation of sinking water columns in that area. However, since
1997, the shelf has ceased to form. Where Wadhams had once observed 12
giant columns of sinking water under the ice, he now found only two -- and
they were so weak that they were unable to reach the seabed.

Wadhams also predicts complete summer melting of the Arctic ice cap by as
early as 2020. On his submarine journeys, using sonar to survey the ice
cap from underneath, he has observed a 46% thinning over the past 20
years.


The Greenland Ice Sheet is Melting

The biggest danger to the Gulf Stream comes from melt-water off the
Greenland ice sheet, the second largest store of fresh water on this
planet. If all of it were to melt, sea levels around the world would rise
by 7 meters -- over 20 feet. However even a partial meltdown would affect
the Gulf Stream, by diluting the salt water right at the crucial point
where the Gulf Stream sinks and returns to the tropics.

Prof. Michael Schlesinger from the University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign, whose climate model already predicts a 50% chance of
Gulf Stream shutdown if we do not enact climate policies, and a 25%
shutdown even if we limit greenhouse gases, based his estimate only on
increased rainfall, due to global warming. He now says he will have to
include additional melt-water from the Greenland ice sheet into his next
set of data, because it appears that the melt has begun.

Observations on the Greenland ice sheet are done by G.P.S. (global
positioning systems) and radar and laser via satellites and airplanes.
G.P.S. data of the past 5 years show accelerated melting, and even the
beginning of a possible feedback effect: the more the ice sheet melts the
faster it starts to move. The reason for this acceleration, it is
believed, is that melt-water from the surface of the ice sheet makes its
way down to the bedrock below, where it acts as a lubricant, further
speeding up the slippage and disintegration.

The question now is, when does this feedback process reach the point of no
return? James Hansen, head of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies,
says that if greenhouse-gas emissions are not controlled now, the total
disintegration of the Greenland ice sheet could be set in motion in a
matter of decades. Although it could take hundreds, perhaps thousands, of
years to fully play out, once begun the process would become
self-reinforcing and cannot be halted.

The Gulf Stream is just one part of a complex global system of ocean
currents that affect temperatures, winds, and rain across the whole
planet. We now have charts of these powerful currents driven by heat and
coolness, traversing all oceans, - Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian. And they
are all interconnected via the huge circumpolar current flowing around the
Antarctic. Changes at the South Pole therefore would have an even larger
effect than those in the Arctic.


Ice Shelf Collapses and the Melting of Antarctica

The Antarctic is the 5th largest continent. It holds 90% of the world’s
fresh water. A comparison in scale to the Greenland ice sheet shows that
if all Antarctic ice were to melt, sea levels would rise by over 169 feet.
The Antarctic has had a permanent ice sheet for the last 30 million years.

The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) in Cambridge now reports rapid warming
on the West Antarctic Peninsula and the WAIS, the West Antarctic Ice
Sheet. Of the 224 glaciers on the Antarctic Peninsula, over 87% are in
retreat. Major ice shelves have collapsed. BAS scientists believe
disappearing ice shelves are now contributing to more rapid melting of
glaciers formerly protected by the floating ice shelf at their base.
Antarctica’s huge Larsen B ice shelf collapsed in just 35 days after a
NASA satellite detected the first ruptures at the end of January 2002; it
was roughly the size of Luxembourg. Soil sediments from that ice shelf
reveal that Larsen B had been intact for 20,000 years - since the peak of
the last ice age. No collapse of this size has happened since the end of
the last Ice Age.

Larsen B's smaller neighbor, Larsen A, broke off in 1995. According to
studies by the BAS, other much bigger ice shelves nearby, such as the Ross
and Ronne, each larger than France, are also considered at risk of
disintegrating.

Another troubling development in the Antarctic, according to the director
of the BAS, Chris Rapley, is the accelerated flow of melt streams
underneath the Antarctic ice sheet. Until recently, scientists were unable
to explain the 20th century’s world-wide sea-level rises of between 1 and
2 mm per year, by the amount of ice that has melted from glaciers and ice
sheets. Even after taking into account thermal expansion, they wondered
where the extra water was coming from.

Recent discoveries show a major hidden source of water comes from polar
ice sheets. In the Antarctic, ice streams, and a newly discovered network
of tributaries underneath the ice sheets, drain 33 major basins. Flow
rates are much faster than previously assumed. Ice streams, from the feed
glaciers behind the collapsed Larsen A and B ice shelves, also show
accelerated flows. The BAS calls this a “cork out of the bottle” effect.

These “wild cards,” the melting of the polar ice caps and the
acidification of the oceans, were only the most dramatic events on the
agenda of the Exeter, UK, meeting on the dangers of climate-change. The
number of scientific papers, recording changes in ecosystems due to global
warming, escalated in five years, from 14 to more than a thousand. In one
presentation after another, scientists described a crisis they had
dedicated their lives to avoid.

Geoffrey Lean, who attended the conference, wrote that there were few in
the room that did not sense their children or grandchildren standing
invisibly at their shoulders. The formal conclusion of the meeting, that
climate change was “already occurring” and that “in many cases the risks
are more serious than previously thought,” appeared in the press all over
the world -- except in the United States. However even in the European
press, very few writers took on the scientific details of this story,
without which political action and organizing are impossible. Geoffrey
Lean wrote: “Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth.”


Bush-Wars on Climate Science

After the Exeter meeting, in an interview for TUC Radio, the director of
BAS, Chris Rapley, spoke about how, in public appearances, he bridges the
gap between science, and popular understanding of these dramatic changes.

He said he always refers to the picture of Earth in space taken by Apollo
17: the small blue planet, tilted back to show the Antarctic, surrounded
by inky blackness. The image, he says, shows that this is all there is, no
other life-support system trails behind; and, that on the planet all is
interconnected.

Earth is the most complex and complicated object in the universe that we
know of, says Rapley, a radio astronomer by training. Only Earth has an
ocean and clouds. Only Earth has physics, biology, geology, chemistry, and
anthropology.

Humans have transformed the earth in a dramatic way, especially in the
last 50 years. Not only have we drastically changed the carbon cycle by
the burning of fossil fuel and coal, and by increasing forest fires; we
have also changed the nitrogen cycle worldwide by the amount of nitrogen
being fixed by industrial agriculture and fertilizer use.

We have transformed more than half the land surface through agriculture,
deforestation, mining, industry, paving, and ever-growing cities. These
changes have altered the climate systems by the way moisture is exchanged
between Earth and the atmosphere.

We have destroyed biodiversity by shifting plants and animals into places
and conditions where they cannot survive. Our own survival, as humans, is
only slightly more secure. We are seeing the most basic of our needs --
air, water, housing, and energy -- disappear before our eyes. Rapley
concluded that there is no way to imagine that humans could do all these
things without an effect.

The demise of our common life-support system is accelerated by even more
energy-intensive activities, by which a privileged group of people
attempts to secure its survival.

The meeting in Exeter was held explicitly to convince the Bush
administration to join the rest of the industrialized world, and to use
the July 2005 G8 meeting to set limits on greenhouse gas emissions. The
United States and Australia, the world’s two largest polluters, are -- to
this day -- refusing to be part of any global agreement to limit CO2 and
other greenhouse gases.

The G8 meeting came and went. The US, with 42% of global fossil fuel CO2,
and 34% of combined greenhouse gas emissions, not only remained outside
the climate- stabilization effort but also fought vigorously to prevent
any progress in setting limits. Given the extraordinary amount of
greenhouse gases emitted by the US, this country alone can dramatically
slow climate change, or bring the planet to the boiling point.

Three weeks before the G8 summit, The Observer (UK) printed a set of
leaked documents revealing how the Bush White House derailed attempts to
address global warming. These submissions to the G8 action plan show that
Washington officials deleted even the suggestion that global warming has
already started.

Among the key sentences removed were: “Our world is warming. Climate
change is a serious threat that has the potential to affect every part of
the globe. And we know that ... mankind's activities are contributing to
this warming. This is an issue we must address urgently.”

At the Exeter conference the International Climate Change Task Force, UK,
said that if we do nothing the climate system will collapse. Stephen
Byers, the co-chair of that task force and an advisor to Tony Blair, said
the point of no return could be reached in a decade. The Bush delegation
to the July 2005 G8 summit in Scotland, probably even George Bush himself,
is aware of that deadline.

However the warning disappeared under the same blanket of denial and
outright lies produced by industry, their paid scientists, and the Bush
administration. Among all official documents that deny climate change,
only one sends a different message: the report on “Climate Change as a
National Security Concern,” commissioned for Donald Rumsfeld by Pentagon
defense adviser Andrew Marshall, and made public in February 2004.

The Global Business Network wrote for the Pentagon: “the focus in climate
research has slowly been shifting from gradual to rapid change. In 2002,
the National Academy of Sciences issued a report concluding that human
activities could trigger abrupt change. A year later, 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.”

Whether in a decade as the UK scientists say, or two as the Pentagon study
says, a consensus is developing that we are reaching a phase of dangerous,
abrupt, and irreversible climate shifts. However, for the Bush
administration, this is not an ecological or humanitarian, but only a
military issue. They question only how to protect US borders from
environmental refugees, how to overpower nations collapsing under the
environmental pressures, how to keep access to food, water, and energy as
other parts of the world go hungry and thirsty; how to keep nuclear
pre-eminence, while those weapons in other countries fall into the hands
of insurgents.

The eerie similarity of these goals and methods, with those of the
so-called war on terrorism, raises the question of whether that war on
terrorism is not really already a war on the Earth. And, as in the war on
terrorism, the already occurring ecological disasters -- like the Osama
bin Ladens -- are needed and promoted. And the religious fundamentalists
are driving this forward because God has given them dominion over the
planet to do as they wish.

And, as irrecoverable time passes, more bad news of ecological landslides
emerges: In early August 2005, the New Scientist reported that, in Western
Siberia, a permafrost area, the size of France and Germany combined, is
thawing for the first time since the ice age, 11,000 years ago. What was
until recently an expanse of frozen peat is turning into a broken
landscape of mud and lakes, some more than a kilometer across. The area’s
peat bog contains an estimated 70 billion tons of methane, a greenhouse
gas 20 times more potent than CO2, which, if released, could dramatically
increase the rate of global warming.

Even in a best-case scenario, were the methane to be released slowly over
a period of 100 years, it would effectively double atmospheric levels of
the gas, leading to a 10% to 25% increase in global warming, said
scientists at the Hadley Centre in Exeter, UK. The scientists from Tomsk
State University and Oxford, who discovered the melt, said that this was
yet another feedback effect, an “ecological landslide that is probably
irreversible and is undoubtedly connected to climatic warming.”

There may be some, cynical enough to think that climate change is an
interesting science fiction experiment, or greedy enough to want to
extract the last drop of oil from the dying Earth for a profit.

But what about the rest of us: not cynical, not greedy and arrogant? It is
pretty clear that there need to be BIG changes in the way we live -- and
that is frightening for many, since we have become so dependent on this
technological civilization. However scientists tell us that the extreme
weather events to come, such as floods, hurricanes, sea-level rise, and
unprecedented heat waves, are more frightening than any change in the way
we choose to live now.

There is a set of figures that is both deeply depressing and hopeful. The
last published World Bank data for CO2 emissions per capita indicate that,
while every man, woman, and child in the US puts out 20 metric tons of CO2
per annum, those in the European Union put out 8 per person per year;
China 2; and the output of Nigerians, who supply us with much of the oil
that we burn into CO2, is zero -- below scale. In 2002, US-Americans used
over 12,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity per person; Europeans used less
than half the amount, while the use in China is 987 kilowatt-hours per
person. The US per-capita use of oil is twice that of the European Union,
and more than 8 times that of China.

What if China aspires to our standard of living? And why not, if we are
not willing to cut back? Europe gets by with so much less CO2-output and
energy-input, while already planning for further cuts. Where is the
measure of global justice, between those who cause no harm and those whose
extravagant use of fossil fuels harms everybody else?

Regardless of who is driving this: industry, the military, religious
fundamentalists, or any permutation of government, be it red or blue,
responsibility for the approaching climate collapse will fall
overwhelmingly on the United States. Since the US government and
corporations not only refuse to cut back but are driving eco-collapse
forward, it is up to ordinary people to refuse collaboration and to
control the perpetrators. For us living in the US, the opportunity and
time to make a difference that will affect the entire planet is now.


Maria Gilardin produces TUC Radio, a weekly half-hour radio program that
is distributed for free to all radio stations via Pacifica Radio's KU
Band, and as an mp3 file on TUC Radio's web site: http://www.tucradio.org.
She may be reached at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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