(In response
to article on Climate Change in New Scientist August
issue)
Climate change is with us. A decade ago, it was
conjecture. Now the future is unfolding before our eyes. Canada's
Inuit see it in disappearing Arctic ice and permafrost. The shantytown
dwellers of Latin America and Southern Asia see it in lethal storms
and floods. Europeans see it in disappearing glaciers, forest fires
and fatal heat waves.
Scientists see it in tree rings, ancient
coral and bubbles trapped in ice cores. These reveal that the world
has not been as warm as it is now for a millennium or more. The three
warmest years on record have all occurred since 1998; 19 of the
warmest 20 since 1980.
And Earth has probably never warmed as
fast as in the past 30 years - a period when natural influences on
global temperatures, such as solar cycles and volcanoes should have
cooled us down. Studies of the thermal inertia of the oceans suggest
that there is more warming in the pipeline.
Climatologists
reporting for the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
say we are seeing global warming caused by human activities and there
are growing fears of feedbacks that will accelerate this
warming.
Global greenhouse
People are causing the change
by burning nature's vast stores of coal, oil and natural gas. This
releases billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) every year,
although the changes may actually have started with the dawn of
agriculture, say some scientists.
The physics of the
"greenhouse effect" has been a matter of scientific fact for a
century. CO2 is a greenhouse gas that traps the Sun's radiation within
the troposphere, the lower atmosphere. It has accumulated along with
other man-made greenhouse gases, such as methane and
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).
If current trends continue, we
will raise atmospheric CO2 concentrations to double pre-industrial
levels during this century. That will probably be enough to raise
global temperatures by around 2°C to 5°C. Some warming is certain,
but the degree will be determined by feedbacks involving melting ice,
the oceans, water vapour, clouds and changes to
vegetation.
Warming is bringing other unpredictable changes.
Melting glaciers and precipitation are causing some rivers to
overflow, while evaporation is emptying others. Diseases are
spreading. Some crops grow faster while others see yields slashed by
disease and drought. Strong hurricanes are becoming more frequent and
destructive. Arctic sea ice is melting faster every year, and there
are growing fears of a shutdown of the ocean currents that keep Europe
warm for its latitude. Clashes over dwindling water resources may
cause conflicts in many regions. As natural ecosystems - such as
coral reefs - are disrupted, biodiversity is reduced. Most species
cannot migrate fast enough to keep up, though others are already
evolving in response to warming.
Thermal expansion of the
oceans, combined with melting ice on land, is also raising sea levels.
In this century, human activity could trigger an irreversible melting
of the Greenland ice sheet and Antarctic glaciers. This would condemn
the world to a rise in sea level of six metres - enough to flood land
occupied by billions of people.
The global warming would be
more pronounced if it were not for sulphur particles and other
pollutants that shade us, and because forests and oceans absorb around
half of the CO2 we produce. But the accumulation rate of atmospheric
CO2 has increased since 2001, suggesting that nature's ability to
absorb the gas could now be stretched to the limit. Recent research
suggests that natural CO2 "sinks", like peat bogs and forests, are
actually starting to release CO2.
Deeper cuts
At the Earth
Summit in 1992, the world agreed to prevent "dangerous" climate
change. The first step was the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which finally came
into force during 2005. It will bring modest emission reductions from
industrialized countries. But many observers say deeper cuts are
needed and developing nations, which have large and growing
populations, will one day have to join in.
Some, including the
US Bush administration, say the scientific uncertainty over the pace
of climate change is grounds for delaying action. The US and Australia
have reneged on Kyoto. During 2005 these countries, and others,
suggested "clean fuel" technologies as an alternative to emissions
cuts.
In any case, according to the IPCC, the world needs to
quickly improve the efficiency of its energy usage and develop
renewable non-carbon fuels like: wind, solar, tidal, wave and perhaps
nuclear power. It also means developing new methods of converting this
clean energy into motive power, like hydrogen fuel cells for cars.
Trading in Kyoto carbon permits may help.
Other less
conventional solutions include ideas to stave off warming by
"mega-engineering" the planet with giant mirrors to deflect the Sun's
rays, seeding the oceans with iron to generate algal blooms, or
burying greenhouse gases below the sea. The bottom line is that we
will need to cut CO2 emissions by 70% to 80% simply to stabilize
atmospheric CO2 concentrations - and thus temperatures. The quicker we
do that, the less unbearably hot our future world will be.
Latest postings
Baghban – The Celluloid Navaratna Baghban - The Celluloid Navaratna
Baghban – "the caretaker of a garden", probably the best script
written in the Indian celluloid history, pro...
more >>
Dhoni Binds A Winning ODI Package India don't like being favourites, and being written off by many even
before their young ODI side assembled in Colombo ultimately worked
just fine. De...
more >>