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-------- Original Message --------

>From The Independent Online
<http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/article338878.ece>

/Start of article

[Headline] Environment in crisis: 'We are past the point of no return'

[Introduction] Thirty years ago, the scientist James Lovelock worked out 
that the Earth possessed a planetary-scale control system which kept the 
environment fit for life. He called it Gaia, and the theory has become 
widely accepted. Now, he believes mankind's abuse of the environment is 
making that mechanism work against us. His astonishing conclusion - that 
climate change is already insoluble, and life on Earth will never be the 
same again.

By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor
Published: 16 January 2006

The world has already passed the point of no return for climate change, 
and civilisation as we know it is now unlikely to survive, according to 
James Lovelock, the scientist and green guru who conceived the idea of 
Gaia - the Earth which keeps itself fit for life.

In a profoundly pessimistic new assessment, published in today's 
Independent, Professor Lovelock suggests that efforts to counter global 
warming cannot succeed, and that, in effect, it is already too late.

The world and human society face disaster to a worse extent, and on a 
faster timescale, than almost anybody realises, he believes. He writes: 
" Before this century is over, billions of us will die, and the few 
breeding pairs of people that survive will be in the Arctic where the 
climate remains tolerable."

In making such a statement, far gloomier than any yet made by a 
scientist of comparable international standing, Professor Lovelock 
accepts he is going out on a limb. But as the man who conceived the 
first wholly new way of looking at life on Earth since Charles Darwin, 
he feels his own analysis of what is happening leaves him no choice. He 
believes that it is the self-regulating mechanism of Gaia itself - 
increasingly accepted by other scientists worldwide, although they 
prefer to term it the Earth System - which, perversely, will ensure that 
the warming cannot be mastered.

This is because the system contains myriad feedback mechanisms which in 
the past have acted in concert to keep the Earth much cooler than it 
otherwise would be. Now, however, they will come together to amplify the 
warming being caused by human activities such as transport and industry 
through huge emissions of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO2 ).

It means that the harmful consequences of human beings damaging the 
living planet's ancient regulatory system will be non-linear - in other 
words, likely to accelerate uncontrollably.

He terms this phenomenon "The Revenge of Gaia" and examines it in detail 
in a new book with that title, to be published next month.

The uniqueness of the Lovelock viewpoint is that it is holistic, rather 
than reductionist. Although he is a committed supporter of current 
research into climate change, especially at Britain's Hadley Centre, he 
is not looking at individual facets of how the climate behaves, as other 
scientists inevitably are. Rather, he is looking at how the whole 
control system of the Earth behaves when put under stress.

Professor Lovelock, who conceived the idea of Gaia in the 1970s while 
examining the possibility of life on Mars for Nasa in the US, has been 
warning of the dangers of climate change since major concerns about it 
first began nearly 20 years ago.

He was one of a select group of scientists who gave an initial briefing 
on global warming to Margaret Thatcher's Cabinet at 10 Downing Street in 
April 1989.

His concerns have increased steadily since then, as evidence of a 
warming climate has mounted. For example, he shared the alarm of many 
scientists at the news last September that the ice covering the Arctic 
Ocean is now melting so fast that in 2005 it reached a historic low point.

Two years ago he sparked a major controversy with an article in The 
Independent calling on environmentalists to drop their long-standing 
opposition to nuclear power, which does not produce the greenhouses 
gases of conventional power stations.

Global warming was proceeding so fast that only a major expansion of 
nuclear power could bring it under control, he said. Most of the Green 
movement roundly rejected his call, and does so still.

Now his concerns have reached a peak - and have a new emphasis. Rather 
than calling for further ways of countering climate change, he is 
calling on governments in Britain and elsewhere to begin large-scale 
preparations for surviving what he now sees as inevitable - in his own 
phrase today, "a hell of a climate", likely to be in Europe up to 8C 
hotter than it is today.

In his book's concluding chapter, he writes: "What should a sensible 
European government be doing now? I think we have little option but to 
prepare for the worst, and assume that we have passed the threshold."

And in today's Independent he writes: "We will do our best to survive, 
but sadly I cannot see the United States or the emerging economies of 
China and India cutting back in time, and they are the main source of 
[CO2] emissions. The worst will happen ..."

He goes on: "We have to keep in mind the awesome pace of change and 
realise how little time is left to act, and then each community and 
nation must find the best use of the resources they have to sustain 
civilisation for as long as they can." He believes that the world's 
governments should plan to secure energy and food supplies in the global 
hothouse, and defences against the expected rise in sea levels. The 
scientist's vision of what human society may ultimately be reduced to 
through climate change is " a broken rabble led by brutal warlords."

Professor Lovelock draws attention to one aspect of the warming threat 
in particular, which is that the expected temperature rise is currently 
being held back artificially by a global aerosol - a layer of dust in 
the atmosphere right around the planet's northern hemisphere - which is 
the product of the world's industry.

This shields us from some of the sun's radiation in a phenomenon which 
is known as "global dimming" and is thought to be holding the global 
temperature down by several degrees. But with a severe industrial 
downturn, the aerosol could fall out of the atmosphere in a very short 
time, and the global temperature could take a sudden enormous leap upwards.

One of the most striking ideas in his book is that of "a guidebook for 
global warming survivors" aimed at the humans who would still be 
struggling to exist after a total societal collapse.

Written, not in electronic form, but "on durable paper with long-lasting 
print", it would contain the basic accumulated scientific knowledge of 
humanity, much of it utterly taken for granted by us now, but originally 
won only after a hard struggle - such as our place in the solar system, 
or the fact that bacteria and viruses cause infectious diseases.

Rough guide to a planet in jeopardy

Global warming, caused principally by the large-scale emissions of 
industrial gases such as carbon dioxide (CO2), is almost certainly the 
greatest threat that mankind has ever faced, because it puts a question 
mark over the very habitability of the Earth.

Over the coming decades soaring temperatures will mean agriculture may 
become unviable over huge areas of the world where people are already 
poor and hungry; water supplies for millions or even billions may fail. 
Rising sea levels will destroy substantial coastal areas in low-lying 
countries such as Bangladesh, at the very moment when their populations 
are mushrooming. Numberless environmental refugees will overwhelm the 
capacity of any agency, or indeed any country, to cope, while modern 
urban infrastructure will face devastation from powerful extreme weather 
events, such as Hurricane Katrina which hit New Orleans last summer.

The international community accepts the reality of global warming, 
supported by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In its 
last report, in 2001, the IPCC said global average temperatures were 
likely to rise by up to 5.8C by 2100. In high latitudes, such as 
Britain, the rise is likely to be much higher, perhaps 8C. The warming 
seems to be proceeding faster than anticipated and in the IPCC's next 
report, 2007, the timescale may be shortened. Yet there still remains an 
assumption that climate change is controllable, if CO2 emissions can be 
curbed. Lovelock is warning: think again.

'The Revenge of Gaia' by James Lovelock is published by Penguin on 2 
February, price £16.99


/End of article


-- 
Darryl McMahon                  http://www.econogics.com
It's your planet.  If you won't look after it, who will?


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