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June
2008| by Betty Wheeler
Polar
bears live far away,
but Del Marians share
something important
with this Arctic species:
The prospect of significant
habitat change because
of global warming.
Two-thirds of the
world's polar bears
are predicted to disappear
within 50 years because
of Arctic ice decline,
say USGS scientists.
Jeff Severinghaus,
a Scripps Institution
of Oceanography scientist
who studies ice-core
samples to learn what
causes abrupt climate
change like one that
occurred 8,000 years
ago, says that best
estimates are that
global warming will
cause sea rise of
three feet, plus or
minus 18 inches, in
the next 100 years.
Because of the force
of waves, each inch
of sea rise results
in about 100 inches
of bluff retreat.
Del Mar's beaches
and bluffs will be
protected or lost
in direct proportion
to global success
in reducing CO 2 emissions
in a 50-100 year window.
Severinghaus
made several key points
in a recent Sandpiper
interview about sea
rise. First, “Ignore
the deniers.” That
humans are causing climate
change, he said, is
as scientifically established
as the link between
smoking and cancer,
industry-funded naysayers
notwithstanding. Second,
because the ocean takes
a long time to warm,
we are already committed
to some sea rise. “We've
realized 1°F
increase in ocean temperature
in the last 50 years,
and we're already committed
to 2 degrees”;
what we aren't already
committed to, he says,
is “whether
our grandchildren live
with 20 feet of sea
level rise, or 5 feet."*
If
we stay on course with
CO 2 emissions, we are
guaranteeing the eventuality
of a Greenland ice slide
that would produce 20-foot
sea rise sometime in
the next 500 years,
though predicting the
timing of ice sheet
slides is like predicting
earthquakes. Even five
years ago, glaciologists
believed ice sheets
were unlikely to contribute
to sea level rises;
that glacier slides
as well as ice melt
are major contributors,
he says, has been a
big wake-up call.
What
should we be doing? “Personal
action,” he
notes, “while
important, is not sufficient.” Plug-in
hybrids, solar, wind
and other alternative
energy sources and CO
2 sequestration are
key, he says, as are
top-down government
regulation and coordinated
global action to level
the playing field so
corporations aren't
disadvantaged by reducing
CO 2 emissions. Take
key individual actions,
he says, but also urge
Congress to support
a coordinated national
and global response.
*Correction: In
the print edition,
the reference to five
feet was erroneously
expressed as five
inches.
Additional
reading:
Publications
by Jeffrey Severinghaus
are listed here, with
links to PDF versions
of many of the articles:
http://icebubbles.ucsd.edu/Publications/pubs.html
Dr.
Severinghaus's links
on climate change are
here:
http://icebubbles.ucsd.edu/Links/links.html
Powerpoint
Presentation:
An
excellent Powerpoint
Presentation of the
2008 Jim Arnold Lecture, "Global
Climate Change: A
Paleoclimate Perspective
from the World's Highest
Mountains",
given on May 9, 2008
at UC San Diego by Lonnie
G. Thompson, University
Distinguished Professor,
School of Earth Sciences & Byrd
Polar Research Center,
The Ohio State University,
is available here:
http://calspace.ucsd.edu/casgc/JArnoldLecture/
Powerpoints/Global%20Climate%20Change--
Lonnie%20Thompson%205-9-08.pdf
It
includes numerous images
relating to climate
change, ice core research
and related expeditions,
glacial retreat, the
Larson B ice shelf collapse,
and more. The
abstract of the presentation
follows:
ABSTRACT: Glaciers
are among the first
responders to global
warming, serving both
as indicators and drivers
of climate change. Over
the last 30 years the
Ice Core Paleoclimate
Research Group at The
Ohio State University
has been engaged in
a program of systematic
recovery of ice cores
from high-elevation,
low-latitude ice fields.
The resulting climate
records, along with
other proxy data, have
produced three primary
lines of evidence for
past and present abrupt
climate change. First,
high-resolution time
series of stable oxygen
isotopes (temperature
proxies) and net balance
(precipitation proxies)
demonstrate that the
current warming at high
elevations in the mid-
to lower latitudes is
unprecedented for at
least the last two millennia. Second,
the continuing retreat
of most mid to low-latitude
glaciers, many having
persisted for thousands
of years, signals a
recent and abrupt change
in the Earth's climate
system. Finally,
there is strong evidence
within and around glaciers
for a widespread and
spatially coherent abrupt
event ~5.2 ka that marked
the transition from
early Holocene warmth
to cooler conditions
that occurred through
much of the world and
was coincident with
structural changes in
several civilizations.
Together, these three
lines of evidence argue
that the present warming
and associated glacier
retreat are unprecedented
in many areas for at
least 5000 years. Specific
evidence of recent acceleration
in the rates of ice
loss of glaciers will
be presented. The
current melting of these
ice fields is consistent
with model predictions
of both high latitude
and vertical amplification
of temperatures in the
tropics. The
ongoing rapid, global-scale
retreat of mountain
glaciers is not only
contributing to global
sea level rise, but
threatening fresh water
supplies in many of
the world's most populous
regions. The current
and present danger posed
by ongoing climate change
and the human response
will be discussed. Professor
Thompson's Ice Core
Paleoclimatology Research
Group website can be
found at: http://bprc.osu.edu/Icecore/
“Target
Atmospheric CO2: Where
Should Humanity Aim?”,
James Hansen, Makiko
Sato, Pushker Kharecha,
David Beerling, Valerie
Masson-Delmotte, Mark
Pagani, Maureen Raymo,
Dana L. Royer, James
C. Zachos
The
lead author of this
scientific paper, published
on Columbia University
's website, is James
Hansen of NASA/Goddard
Institute for Space
Studies. Examining available
data to consider what
our target atmospheric
CO2 should be, the paper
concludes:
“Humanity
today, collectively,
must face the uncomfortable
fact that industrial
civilization itself
has become the principal
driver of global climate.
If we stay our present
course, using fossil
fuels to feed a growing
appetite for energy-intensive
life styles, we will
soon leave the climate
of the Holocene, the
world of prior human
history. The eventual
response to doubling
preindustrial atmospheric
CO 2 likely would be
a nearly ice-free planet.
Humanity's task of moderating
human-caused global
climate change is urgent.
Ocean and ice sheet
inertias provide a buffer
delaying full response
by centuries, but there
is a danger that human-made
forcings could drive
the climate system beyond
tipping points such
that change proceeds
out of our control.
The time available to
reduce the human-made
forcing is uncertain,
because models of the
global system and critical
components such as ice
sheets are inadequate.
However, climate response
time is surely less
than the atmospheric
lifetime of the human-caused
perturbation of CO 2
. Thus remaining fossil
fuel reserves should
not be exploited without
a plan for retrieval
and disposal of resulting
atmospheric CO 2 . Paleoclimate
evidence and ongoing
global changes imply
that today's CO 2 ,
about 385 ppm, is already
too high to maintain
the climate to which
humanity, wildlife,
and the rest of the
biosphere are adapted.… We
suggest an initial objective
of reducing atmospheric
CO 2 to 350 ppm, with
the target to be adjusted
as scientific understanding
and empirical evidence
of climate effects accumulate… This
target must be pursued
on a timescale of decades… A
practical global strategy
almost surely requires
a rising global price
on CO 2 emissions and
phase-out of coal use
except for cases where
the CO 2 is captured
and sequestered. The
carbon price should
eliminate use of unconventional
fossil fuels, unless,
as is unlikely, the
CO 2 can be captured.
A reward system for
improved agricultural
and forestry practices
that sequester carbon
could remove the current
CO 2 overshoot. With
simultaneous policies
to reduce non-CO 2 greenhouse
gases, it appears still
feasible to avert catastrophic
climate change. Present
policies, with continued
construction of coal-fired
power plants without
CO 2 capture, suggest
that decision-makers
do not appreciate the
gravity of the situation.
We must begin to move
now toward the era beyond
fossil fuels. Continued
growth of greenhouse
gas emissions, for just
another decade, practically
eliminates the possibility
of near-term return
of atmospheric composition
beneath the tipping
level for catastrophic
effects. The most difficult
task, phase-out over
the next 20-25 years
of coal use that does
not capture CO 2 , is
herculean, yet feasible
when compared with the
efforts that went into
World War II. The stakes,
for all life on the
planet, surpass those
of any previous crisis.
The greatest danger
is continued ignorance
and denial, which could
make tragic consequences
unavoidable.
The
full paper can be read
here:
http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/2008/TargetCO2_20080407.pdf
“Market
Cooling: Will California
and the West knock down
global warming by buying
and selling carbon?” High
Country News, April
30, 2007 .
link
to: http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=16970
“Where
there's fire, there's
global warming” High
Country News, April
7, 2006 (climate scientist
Anthony Westerling of
Scripps Institution
of Oceanography on the
role of climate change
in the West's fires.
Link
to: http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=16453
Op-ed:
Thomas
Friedman, “Dumb
as We Wanna Be” (on
our national strategy
for clean energy: “[T]
he biggest energy crisis
we have in our country
today is the energy
to be serious — the
energy to do big things
in a sustained, focused
and intelligent way”.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/30/opinion/
30friedman.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
Impact
of climate change
on poor countries:
Oxfam
America , an international
relief and development
organization, has published
a briefing paper, “Adaptation
101”,
on the impact of climate
change on poor countries,
and recommendations
for action.
http://www.oxfamamerica.org/newsandpublications/
publications/briefing_papers/adaptation-101/Adaptation-101.pdf
Impact
of climate change
and oil and gas drilling
on the polar bear:
For
a detailed
analysis of the effects
of global warming on
the polar bear, and how protection
of polar
bear habitat is jeopardized
by the
oil and gas industry's
current efforts to obtain
petroleum licenses in
the Chukchi Sea, in
a 46,000-square-mile
area between Alaska
and the coast of the
Russian Far East which
is said to hold 15 billion
gallons of recoverable
oil and a huge volume
of natural gas, see
Richard Ellis's article, "Politicizing
the Polar Bear."
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080630_politicizing_the_polar_bear/
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