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Date: Sun, 25 Dec 2005 21:07:08 -0500 (EST)
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Subject: The Coming Meltdown (A Review)

The Coming Meltdown (A Review)
By Bill McKibben


New York Review of Books
Volume 53, Number 1
January 12, 2006


Thin Ice: Unlocking the Secrets of Climate in the
World's Highest Mountains
by Mark Bowen
Henry Holt, 463 pp., $30.00

Dancing at the Dead Sea: Tracking the World's
Environmental Hotspots
by Alanna Mitchell
University of Chicago Press, 239 pp., $25.00

The year 2005 has been the hottest year on record for
the planet, hotter than 1998, 2002, 2004, and 2003.
More importantly, perhaps, this has been the autumn
when the planet has shown more clearly than before just
what that extra heat means. Consider just a few of the
findings published in the major scientific journals
during the last three months:

--Arctic sea ice is melting fast. There was 20 percent
less of it than normal this summer, and as Dr. Mark
Serreze, one of the researchers from Colorado's
National Snow and Ice Data Center, told reporters, "the
feeling is we are reaching a tipping point or threshold
beyond which sea ice will not recover." That is
particularly bad news because it creates a potent
feedback effect: instead of blinding white ice that
bounces sunlight back into space, there is now open
blue water that soaks up the sun's heat, amplifying the
melting process.

--In the tundra of Siberia, other researchers report
that permafrost has begun to melt rapidly, and, as it
does, formerly frozen methane--which, like the more
prevalent carbon dioxide, acts as a heat-trapping
"greenhouse gas"--is escaping into the atmosphere. In
some places last winter, the methane bubbled up so
steadily that puddles of standing water couldn't freeze
even in the depths of the Russian winter.

--British researchers, examining almost six thousand
soil borings across the UK, found another feedback
effect. Warmer temperatures (growing seasons now last
eleven days longer at that latitude) meant that
microbial activity had increased dramatically in the
soil. This, in turn, meant that much of the carbon long
stored in the soil was now being released into the
atmosphere. The quantities were large enough to negate
all the work that Britain had done to switch away from
coal to reduce carbon in the atmosphere. "All the
consequences of global warming will occur more
rapidly," said Guy Kirk, chief scientist on the study.
"That's the scary thing. The amount of time we have got
to do something about it is smaller than we thought."

Such findings--and there are more like them in
virtually every issue of Science and Nature--came
against the backdrop of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita,
and the now record-breaking Atlantic storm season that
has brought us back around the alphabet and as far as
Hurricane Epsilon. Because hurricanes draw their power
from the warm water in the upper layers of the sea's
surface, this bout of storminess served as a kind of
exclamation point to a mid-August paper by the MIT
researcher Kerry Emmanuel demonstrating that such
storms have become more powerful and long-lasting, and
would likely continue to increase in destructiveness in
the future.

But the hurricanes also demonstrated another fact about
global warming, this one having nothing to do with
chemistry or physics but instead with politics,
journalism, and the rituals of science. Climate change
somehow seems unable to emerge on the world stage for
what it really is: the single biggest challenge facing
the planet, the equal in every way to the nuclear
threat that transfixed us during the past half-century
and a threat we haven't even begun to deal with. The
coverage of Katrina's aftermath, for instance, was
scathing in depicting the Bush administration's
incompetence and cronyism; but the President --and his
predecessors--were spared criticism for their far
bigger sin of omission, the failure to do anything at
all to stanch the flood of carbon that America, above
all other nations, pours into the atmosphere and that
is the prime cause of the great heating now underway.
Though Bush has been egregious in his ignorance about
climate change, the failure to do anything about it has
been bipartisan; Bill Clinton and Al Gore were grandly
rhetorical about the issue, but nonetheless presided
over a 13 percent increase in America's carbon
emissions.

That lack of preparation and precaution dwarfs even the
failure to prepare for the September 11 attacks, and
its effects will be with us far longer. It's not, of
course, that America could in two decades have
prevented global warming. But we could have begun
taking the steps to keep it from spinning entirely out
of control, steps that grow ever more difficult to take
with each passing season. The books under review,
though neither deals directly with the politics of
global warming, help us understand some of the reasons
why we've so far done so little.

for the rest of this review, go to
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18616
_______________________________________________________

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