With
all the talk of 4 C global warming it is worthwhile looking back at
this article from back in 2008. Someone was able to face the truth.
On
a planet 4C hotter, all we can prepare for is extinction
There's
no 'adaptation' to such steep warming. We must stop pandering to
special interests, and try a new, post-Kyoto strategy
Oliver
Tickell
11
August, 2008
We
need to get prepared for four
degrees of global warming,
Bob Watson told the Guardian last week. At first sight this looks
like wise counsel from the climate science adviser to Defra. But the
idea that we could adapt to a 4C
rise
is absurd and dangerous. Global
warming
on this scale would be a catastrophe that would mean, in the immortal
words that Chief Seattle probably never spoke, "the end of
living and the beginning of survival" for humankind. Or perhaps
the beginning
of our extinction.
The
collapse of the polar ice caps would become inevitable, bringing
long-term sea
level rises
of 70-80 metres. All the world's coastal plains would be lost,
complete with ports, cities, transport and industrial infrastructure,
and much of the world's most productive farmland. The world's
geography would be transformed much as it was at the end of the last
ice age, when sea levels rose by about 120 metres to create the
Channel, the North Sea and Cardigan Bay out of dry land. Weather
would become extreme and unpredictable, with more frequent and severe
droughts, floods
and hurricanes. The Earth's carrying capacity would be hugely
reduced. Billions would undoubtedly die.
Watson's
call was supported by the government's former chief scientific
adviser, Sir David King, who warned that "if we get to a
four-degree rise it is quite possible that we would begin to see a
runaway increase". This is a remarkable understatement. The
climate system is already experiencing significant feedbacks, notably
the summer melting
of the Arctic sea ice.
The more the ice melts, the more sunshine is absorbed by the sea, and
the more the Arctic warms. And as the Arctic warms, the release of
billions of tonnes of methane – a greenhouse gas 70 times stronger
than carbon dioxide over 20 years – captured under melting
permafrost is already under way.
To
see how far this process could go, look 55.5m years to the
Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, when a global temperature increase
of 6C coincided with the release of about 5,000 gigatonnes of carbon
into the atmosphere, both as CO2 and as methane from bogs and seabed
sediments. Lush subtropical forests grew in polar regions, and sea
levels rose to 100m higher than today. It appears that an initial
warming pulse triggered other warming processes. Many scientists warn
that this historical event may be analogous to the present: the
warming caused by human emissions could propel us towards a similar
hothouse Earth.
But
what are we to do? All our policies to date to tackle global warming
have been miserable failures. The Kyoto protocol has created a vast
carbon market but done little to reduce emissions. The main effect of
the EU's emissions trading scheme has been to transfer about €30bn
or more from consumers to Europe's biggest polluters, the power
companies. The EU and US foray into biofuels
has, at huge cost, increased greenhouse gas emissions
and created a world food
crisis,
causing starvation in many poor countries.
So
are all our efforts doomed to failure? Yes, so long as our
governments remain craven to special interests, whether carbon
traders
or fossil fuel companies. The carbon market is a valuable tool, but
must be subordinate to climatic imperatives. The truth is that to
prevent runaway greenhouse warming, we will have to leave most of the
world's fossil fuels in the ground, especially carbon-heavy coal, oil
shales and tar sands. The fossil fuel and power companies must be
faced down.
Global
problems need global solutions, and we also need an effective
replacement for the failed Kyoto protocol. The entire Kyoto system of
national allocations is obsolete because of the huge volumes of
energy
embodied in products traded across national boundaries. It also
presents a major obstacle to any new agreement – as demonstrated by
the 2008 G8
meeting
in Japan that degenerated into a squabble over national emission
rights.
The
answer? Scrap national allocations and place a single global cap on
greenhouse gas emissions, applied "upstream" – for
instance, at the oil refinery, coal-washing station and cement
factory. Sell permits up to that cap in a global auction, and use the
proceeds to finance solutions to climate change – accelerating the
use of renewable
energy,
raising energy efficiency, protecting forests, promoting
climate-friendly farming, and researching geoengineering
technologies. And commit hundreds of billions of dollars per year to
finance adaptation to climate change, especially in poor countries.
Such
a package of measures would allow us to achieve zero net greenhouse
gas emissions by 2050, and long-term stabilisation at 350 parts per
million of CO2 equivalent. This avoids the economic pain that a
cap-and-trade system alone would cause, and targets assistance at the
poor, who are least to blame and most need help. The permit auction
would raise about $1 trillion per year, enough to finance a spread of
solutions. At a quarter of the world's annual oil spending, it is a
price well worth paying.
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