latimes.com     
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-op-mckibben11-2008may11,0,7434369.story

>From the Los Angeles Times

Civilization's last chance
The planet is nearing a tipping point on climate change, and it gets
much worse, fast.
By Bill McKibben / op-ed May 11, 2008

Even for Americans -- who are 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 helps send the price of a loaf of bread shooting
upward and helps ignite food riots on three continents. It's that
everything is so 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 of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

A few weeks ago, NASA's chief climatologist, James Hansen, submitted a
paper to Science magazine with several coauthors. The abstract
attached to it argued -- and I have never read stronger language in a
scientific paper -- that "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. It appears that 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 buying TVs the size of
windshields, which suck juice ever faster.

Here's the thing. Hansen didn't just say that if we didn't act, there
was trouble coming. He didn't just say that 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 10 times more trees than in any previous
infestation across the northern reaches of Canada this year. This
means far more carbon heading for the atmosphere and apparently dooms
Canada's efforts to comply with the Kyoto protocol, which was already
in doubt because of its decision to start producing oil for the U.S.
from Alberta's tar sands.)

We're the ones who kicked the warming off; 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% of incoming solar
radiation back into space has turned to blue water that absorbs 80% 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."

In the next two or three years, the nations of the world are supposed
to be negotiating a successor treaty to the Kyoto accord (which, for
the record, has never been approved by the United States -- the only
industrial nation that has failed to do so). When December 2009 rolls
around, heads of state are supposed to converge on Copenhagen to sign
a treaty -- a treaty that would go into effect at the last plausible
moment to heed the most basic and crucial of limits on atmospheric
CO2.

If we did everything right, Hansen says, we could see carbon emissions
start to fall fairly rapidly and the oceans begin to pull some of that
CO2 out of the atmosphere. Before the century was out, we might even
be on track back to 350. We might stop just short of some of those
tipping points, like the Road Runner screeching to a halt at the very
edge of the cliff.

More likely, though, we're the coyote -- because "doing everything
right" means that political systems around the world would have to
take enormous and painful steps right away. It means no more new
coal-fired power plants anywhere, and plans to quickly close the ones
already in operation. (Coal-fired power plants operating the way
they're supposed to are, in global warming terms, as dangerous as
nuclear plants melting down.) It means making car factories turn out
efficient hybrids next year, just the way U.S. automakers made them
turn out tanks in six months at the start of World War II. It means
making trains an absolute priority and planes a taboo.

It means making every decision wisely because we have so little time
and so little money, at least relative to the task at hand. And
hardest of all, it means the rich countries of the world sharing
resources and technology freely with the poorest ones so that they can
develop dignified lives without burning their cheap coal.

It's possible. The United States launched a Marshall Plan once, and
could do it again, this time in relation to carbon. But at a time when
the president has, once more, urged drilling in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge, it seems unlikely. At a time when the alluring phrase
"gas tax holiday" -- which would actually encourage more driving and
more energy consumption -- has danced into our vocabulary, it's hard
to see. And if it's hard to imagine sacrifice here, imagine China,
where people produce a quarter as much carbon apiece as Americans do.

Still, as long as it's not impossible, we've got a duty to try to push
those post-Kyoto negotiations in the direction of reality. In fact,
it's about the most obvious duty humans have ever faced.

After all, those talks are our last chance; you just can't do this one
lightbulb at a time.

We do have one thing going for us -- the Web -- which at least allows
you to imagine something like a grass-roots global effort. If the
Internet was built for anything, it was built for sharing this number,
for making people understand that "350" stands for a kind of safety, a
kind of possibility, a kind of future.

Hansen's words were well-chosen: "a planet similar to that on which
civilization developed." People will doubtless survive on a non-350
planet, but those who do will be so preoccupied, coping with the
endless unintended consequences of an overheated planet, that
civilization may not.

Civilization is what grows up in the margins of leisure and security
provided by a workable relationship with the natural world. That
margin won't exist, at least not for long, as long as we remain on the
wrong side of 350. That's the limit we face.

Bill McKibben, a scholar in residence at Middlebury College and the
author, most recently, of "The Bill McKibben Reader," is the
co-founder of Project 350 ( www.350.org), devoted to reducing carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere to 350 parts per million. A longer version
of this article appears at Tomdispatch.com.

Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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