New piece on atmospheric/climate impacts should Putin unleash a limited
nuclear attack. Includes MacCracken caveats, Paul Ehrlich, Alan Robock,
Brian Toon and much more.

Please weigh in here or in the post comment thread (the latter helps
elevate the piece out there in Google search etc.)

https://revkin.bulletin.com/as-putin-s-nuclear-brinkmanship-continues-nuclear-winter-risk-rises




Putin's Ukraine Escalation Prompts Fresh Urgency on "Nuclear Winter" and
U.S. Nuclear Posture
<https://www.facebook.com/bulletin_community_platforms/notif/link/?ndid=Y0YMTY0NjQyNDQzMzg1MzI4NzpjbzBkcWlhMHhvaGxjNWphbzNjdHltZWo1OWF3cnZyNXR3Ymc3NDR3a2JpbDcxZHNiZ0BkZXZudWxsLmZhY2Vib29rLmNvbToxNjg5Mg&redirect=https%3A%2F%2Frevkin.bulletin.com%2Fas-putin-s-nuclear-brinkmanship-continues-nuclear-winter-risk-rises%2F%3Fsource%3Demail&notif_type=voices_article_preview&link_type=cta_to_article&source=email>

In the Cold War, scientists found fires from a nuclear war could loft so
much smoke high into the rainless stratosphere that solar dimming could
spawn famine. Lately, the science has strengthened.


Andrew Revkin
Mar 04


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*.*
Phrase of the week - "deconfliction hotline"

As Vladimir Putin's horrific war on Ukraine intensifies, there have been
flashes of what counts as good news these days.

Late in the week, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Pentagon and
Russian counterparts established a *
<https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/russia-ukraine-latest-news-2022-03-03/card/u-s-russia-establish-hotline-to-avoid-accidental-conflict-hPUjy4NlEcA2SE6kCwHO>
<https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/russia-ukraine-latest-news-2022-03-03/card/u-s-russia-establish-hotline-to-avoid-accidental-conflict-hPUjy4NlEcA2SE6kCwHO>"deconfliction
hotlin
<https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/russia-ukraine-latest-news-2022-03-03/card/u-s-russia-establish-hotline-to-avoid-accidental-conflict-hPUjy4NlEcA2SE6kCwHO>*econfliction
hotline," a communication portal, also used around the Syrian conflict,
aimed at avoiding spiraling missteps. Such circuit breakers are an
essential way to limit odds of accidental escalation - one of the *three
flavors of war escalation
<https://revkin.bulletin.com/the-putin-nuclear-threat-cant-be-ignored>* I
wrote about earlier this week.

And the fire reported at the largest nuclear power plant
<https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/top-wrap-1-europes-largest-nuclear-power-plant-fire-after-russian-attack-mayor-2022-03-04/>
in Europe was actually at a training facility outside the plant perimeter,
not that this reduces deep concern about Russia's capacity to unleash holy
hell in its messy surge into a country with 15 power-plant nuclear reactors
and the wreckage of Chernobyl. (Follow *James Acton
<https://carnegieendowment.org/experts/434>* of the nuclear program at
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace for more and read his piece on
Ukraine's nuclear status
<https://carnegieendowment.org/2022/02/24/most-immediate-nuclear-danger-in-ukraine-isn-t-chernobyl-pub-86521>
.)

President Joe Biden is *
<https://thebulletin.org/2022/02/the-ukraine-invasion-highlights-why-bidens-nuclear-posture-review-should-endorse-bold-new-vision-for-nuclear-security/>poised
to update the United States N
<https://thebulletin.org/2022/02/the-ukraine-invasion-highlights-why-bidens-nuclear-posture-review-should-endorse-bold-new-vision-for-nuclear-security/>*uclear
Posture Review. I hope Putin's aggression doesn't sway the administration
to give up on some of Biden's earlier pledges to focus on deterrence and
arms reduction. But with the midterms and 2024 in mind, I wouldn't count on
this. And history has shown how difficult it is for any president to
counter the pull of politics and path dependency and the self-sustaining
power of the military-industrial complex. See the readings below for some
invaluable guidance.
Nuclear winter is back

The prime focus worldwide has to be on finding ways to counter or slow
Putin's unprovoked Ukraine invasion and help the millions of Ukrainians
whose lives are imperiled or up-ended.

And it's equally vital to support those in Russia courageously protesting
against this war crime. (I hope science organizations are trying to protect
Oleg Anisimov, who was threatened with "oblivion"
<https://twitter.com/Revkin/status/1498300847138217984> by a Putin crony
after he spoke against the invasion at last weekend's meeting approving the
latest United Nations climate report
<https://revkin.bulletin.com/un-climate-panel-says-nations-must-boost-resilience-even-as-they-cut-heating-gases>
.)
Twitter
See @Revkin's post on Twitter.
twitter.com/Revkin
<https://twitter.com/Revkin/status/1498294386869907458>

But given Putin's evident disregard for any outside influence (at least so
far) and given evidence that Russia's war-fighting strategy may have
shifted to include nuclear weapons in regional conflicts (see the
Congressional Research Service report below), it's also vital to weigh some
planet-scale facets of this crisis.

That includes swinging back to an issue I first reported on during the
first Cold War: the prospect that even a "limited" use of nuclear weapons
could produce a planet-girdling "nuclear winter."

Read my 1985 cover story on nuclear winter
<https://www.slideshare.net/Revkin/hard-facts-about-nuclear-winter-1985>

My first magazine cover story on potential human disruptions of Earth's
climate was not about global warming. Published in 1985 in Science Digest
<https://www.slideshare.net/Revkin/hard-facts-about-nuclear-winter-1985>,
the article was about the nuclear winter hypothesis that emerged as
scientists estimated how much smoke could rise into the rainless
stratosphere from cities incinerated in a nuclear conflict.

The initial "twilight at noon
<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/236736050_The_Atmosphere_after_a_Nuclear_War_Twilight_at_Noon>"
picture was truly grim, with analyses projecting that not only would the
initial nuclear blasts and radiation create local calamities, but global
crop failures would follow for at least several years, potentially
undermining civilization almost everywhere. Billions of human lives would
be in peril.

As often happens in science, subsequent studies seemed to add sufficient
nuance that the concept faded. It also faded because the Cold War itself
ebbed after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. Stockpiles of nuclear
weapons plunged. That's when the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists set the
"Doomsday Clock" as far away from calamity as it has been - 17 minutes to
midnight. It's now stuck at 100 seconds to midnight, as I explored in a
recent post.

Read about the Doomsday Clock's 75 years of resets
<https://revkin.bulletin.com/where-would-you-set-the-planetary-doomsday-clock-hands>
.

But the threat widened as the count of nuclear-armed nations rose to nine,
including Pakistan and India - where the key demonstration in 1974 was
called, believe it or not, "Operation Smiling Buddha
<https://twitter.com/Revkin/status/1499783466719797248>."

And a decade of recent climate research, using ever more sophisticated
simulations and fresh sources of data, has strengthened the picture of
catastrophic agricultural outcomes, particularly, following even a
"limited" nuclear exchange.

A 2020 study led by Jonas Jägermeyr <https://twitter.com/JonasJaegermeyr>,
then a postdoctoral scientist at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space
Studies, had a blunt title, "*A regional nuclear conflict would compromise
global food security
<https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2020/03/16/even-limited-india-pakistan-nuclear-war-would-bring-global-famine/>*."
The findings definitely support that warning:

"[S]udden cooling and perturbations of precipitation and solar radiation
could disrupt food production and trade worldwide for about a decade—more
than the impact from anthropogenic climate change by late century."

It's worth pausing to weigh that. *Within a short span following a modest
nuclear war, solar dimming and precipitation shifts would cause more
disruption of food systems than unabated human-driven global warming would
do sometime toward the end of the 21st century.*

The test case in that instance was a nuclear war between India and
Pakistan. But the findings would be no different for a regional nuclear
conflict in eastern Europe, according to a study co-author, longtime
nuclear-winter scientist Alan Robock of Rutgers. He spoke about this in a
Sustain What discussion I ran on nuclear winter and Putin's warm on
Thursday.

The main reason, of course, is that when smoke gets into the rainless
stratosphere, it disperses north and south and quickly girdles the Earth,
as the animation below from one simulation vividly shows. Click here for
the paper <http://climate.envsci.rutgers.edu/nuclear/> and lots more from
the website of Alan Robock, someone I've been interviewing about this
subject for half my life - and I'm a Medicare guy now
<https://revkin.bulletin.com/as-putin-s-nuclear-brinkmanship-continues-nuclear-winter-risk-rises/?source=email>

[*Insert 3/4, 3:20pm ET** -* A lot depends on how much smoke is generated,
and how high it rises. See the postscdript below for more.]

The Sustain What conversation included the biologists Paul R. Ehrlich and
Anne Ehrlich of Stanford University
<https://www.heinzawards.net/recipients/paul_anne_ehrlich>, who've been
studying and working to limit global environmental and societal threats for
more than half a century.

In considering the implications for feeding humanity (setting aside the
ecological impacts) Paul said this:

"It's not like we have a wonderfully well-fed world now and that there's no
threats to the food supply without adding further disruption of the
atmosphere. The threat basically is to the end of civilization. Whether or
not *Homo sapiens* would go extinct is something we've argued about and it
depends on so many factors.... But the end of civilization is something
that all of my biological colleagues and I think, and most physicists would
agree, is what's going to be if we have a nuclear war."

Yes, Ehrlich's 1968 bestseller, "The Population Bomb
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Population_Bomb>," was overwrought.
(Here's a recent conversation by Ehrlich
<https://www.climateone.org/audio/population-bomb-50-years-later-conversation-paul-ehrlich>
on the issues.) But he has remained a vital contributor to discourse on
disarmament and sustainable development.

Watch the show on YouTube below or on Facebook
<https://www.facebook.com/AndrewRevkin/videos/384626613393141/>, LinkedIn
<https://www.linkedin.com/video/event/urn:li:ugcPost:6904818247561277440/>
or Twitter <https://twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1nAJEYMqPAgJL>:
Putin’s Nuclear Threat – Global Implications and Options
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NErzMjCMyrc&feature=emb_title>

My other guest was Owen Brian Toon
<https://experts.colorado.edu/display/fisid_110521>, a University of
Colorado atmospheric scientist who was one of the five co-authors of the
foundational "TTAPS" paper warning of nuclear winter
<https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.222.4630.1283> in 1983 and
still focuses on human effects on the atmosphere and climate.

In our chat he mentioned that his 2018 TEDx talk on nuclear winter has gone
from 5 million to 6 million viewers in the past week. The title? "I've
studied nuclear war for 35 years - you should be worried."

And while nuclear winter is not worth fixating on, you should worry and do
what you can do to change outcomes through engagement with leaders and
neighbors.
I've studied nuclear war for 35 years -- you should be worried. | Brian
Toon | TEDxMileHigh
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7hOpT0lPGI>Resources

*Russia’s Nuclear Weapons: Doctrine, Forces, and Modernization
<https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/details?prodcode=R45861>* - a
March 1 report from the Congressional Research Service by *Amy F. Woolf
<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amy-woolf-90b99943/>**,* a longtime
nuclear-security analyst there.

Woolf says most analysts see Russia's doctrine as shifting from the
global-scale deterrence model of the Cold War to integrating nuclear
weapons into regional strategies. Here's the most worrisome passage:

"When combined with military exercises and Russian officials’ public
statements, this evolving doctrine seems to indicate that Russia has
potentially placed a greater reliance on nuclear weapons and may threaten
to use them during regional conflicts. This doctrine has led some U.S.
analysts to conclude that Russia has adopted an “escalate to de-escalate”
strategy, where it might threaten to use nuclear weapons if it were losing
a conflict with a NATO member, in an effort to convince the United States
and its NATO allies to withdraw from the conflict."

Woolf goes on to stress that analysts are divided on the "escalate to
de-escalate" component. In some ways, that may count as good news, as well,
if it's true, because it means Putin's playing a game more than hovering
his finger over a button.

*The Biden Nuclear Posture Review: Obstacles to Reducing Reliance on
Nuclear Weapons
<https://www.armscontrol.org/act/2022-01/features/biden-nuclear-posture-review-obstacles-reducing-reliance-nuclear-weapons#bio>*
-
a foundational report published in January by the Arms Control Association
and written by Adam Mount, director of the Association's Defense Posture
Project and a senior fellow at the Federation of American Scientists.

I'll add more, including your suggestions. *Please weigh in in the comments
or **send me a note <http://j.mp/revkinfeedback>**!*
*Help build Sustain What*

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Hope is a verb

As I wrote a week ago and above, the prime need right now is to help those
in peril in Ukraine, or on the run. This *Ukrainian aid and information hub
<https://ukrainewar.carrd.co/>* still seems an ideal starting point.

website <https://ukrainewar.carrd.co/>
Postscript

After I posted this dispatch, *Mike MacCracken
<https://climate.org/michael-maccracken/#:~:text=Michael%20MacCracken%20has%20been%20Chief,held%20on%20a%20volunteer%20basis.>*,
a longtime Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory climate scientist who
studied nuclear war climate impacts and climate change for decades, sent a
note with some cautionary points about nuclear winter in relation to the
other threats from nuclear war. He noted there are "many uncertainties in
how much smoke might be lofted to the upper troposphere, which is the smoke
that sunlight can loft further [into the stratosphere]."

He added:

"There is just a real question about getting as much smoke lofted as is
needed for the types of outcomes that were described. Back in the 1980s we
scientists ran a range of smoke scenarios. I think some of the assumptions
from back then have continued even though it is not clear there is enough
concentrated flammable material and not considering that only some
meteorological conditions are compatible with lofting.

No doubt nuclear war would be horrible on combatant nations and then, as
the SCOPE study pointed out, the global economy is very vulnerable due to
its nodes, so this could well clobber trade in seeds, fertilizers,
medicines, food, etc. and create terrible conditions. While there may be
some cooling, I don't think making it the primary reason not to go to war
is justified and think the main focus needs to be kept on the direct and
economic impacts."

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-- 
*ANDREW REVKIN*
*Founding Director, Initiative on Communication & Sustainability*
*Columbia University Climate School*
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