This article does the usual thing and finishes on a note of optimism unwarranted and unconnected to what comes before it.
This
Is Life in a 400 PPM World
17
May, 2013
Okay,
so it won't be that bad.
Yet. Image: Flickr
It
already ranks as one of the grimmest measurements ever taken. Climate
scientists found that for
the first time in approximately three million years,
the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has
reached 400 parts per million.
The reason that figure was splashed across the front page of the
New York Times—and
why top
White House advisors find
it "truly frightening"—should be well understood by now.
Carbon dioxide is a powerful greenhouse gas, and the more that
accumulates in the atmosphere, the more sunlight it traps—and the
more the globe warms.
We've
now added enough CO2 to the atmosphere to change the lives of every
human on the planet. This isn't an exaggeration. An increasingly
large portion of the CO2 clogging our atmosphere comes from human
activity—from our coal-fired power plants, our petroleum burning
cars, our factories. Before we had any of those, carbon dioxide
accounted for just 280 ppm. That means we've already turned up
the dial on the planet's central heating by some 42 percent.
As
with most heating units, it will take a little time for the
temperatures to catch up with the new setting. But many of those
changes are already under way. Life in a world where carbon accounts
for 400 ppm is going to be quite different from the old 280 ppm
world. The climate is now fundamentally different than it was
40, 30, even 20 years ago.
When
I was born, in the mid-1980s, the amount of CO2 that had accumulated
in the atmosphere was
just enough to account for 350 ppm—the
amount climatologists like NASA's Dr. James Hansen have identified as
the threshold between a stable climate and an unpredictable,
potentially volatile one. Between the 1800s and then, humans—mostly
the United States and Europe—had built enough carbon-belching power
plants and factories to add 70 ppm to the atmosphere.
Yet
in my short life alone, human activity has pumped enough carbon
pollution into our skies to raise the bar a full 50 ppm more. That's
a huge change—out of the 120 ppm humans have added in total,
nearly half of it has occurred in just under 30 years. That's the
rest of the world following suit, building fossil fueled power plants
and industrializing; the same way the U.S. did.
And
that's enough carbon to transform our climate to the point that it
better resembles another geologic era entirely: The Pliocene.
That era, which took place from 5.8 to 2.6 million years ago, was the
last time there was so much CO2 was blanketing the planet. According
to the geological record, the CO2 levels of 360-400 ppm that marked
the Pliocene made the world a drastically different place than the
one that you and I grew up in.
Here
are some
characteristics of the 400 ppm world then—and
those that are likely to be reprised in coming years:
-Sea
levels were, on average, between 50 and 82 feet higher.
-Temperatures
were 2-3˚C higher, or about 4-6 ˚F, than they are today.
-Arctic
temperatures were between 10-20 ˚C hotter.
-Many species
of both plants and animals existed several hundred kilometers
north
of where their nearest relatives exist today.
-Vast
swaths of land turned into swamps.
Image: Liverpool
University
This
is our 400 ppm world. Hotter, nastier, even less predictable
than the one you got comfortable with. This is the world that your
kids are going to be growing up in. And some of the irrevocable
damage has already been done.
"We've
taken one of the largest physical features on earth--the Arctic--and
we've broken it; new data shows 80 percent of the ice that was there
40 years ago is gone. So now we'll find out what disappears between
here and 450," Bill McKibben, the environmentalist and
author of Earth:
Life on a Strange New Planet, told
me in an email.
What
seems like pessimism is actually gloomy pragmatism. McKibben knows
that if we keep our factories humming, our cars guzzling, and coal
plants firing, we'll hit 450 ppm in less time than we hit 400.
"Sadly,
we're shooting right past 400 ppm and likely to commit to at least
450 ppm within a matter of years if we don't begin ramping down our
greenhouse gas emissions," the preeminent climatologist Michael
E. Mann told me.
And
if there's one thing that's worse than a 400 ppm world, it's a 450
ppm world.
"If
we cross 450 ppm we likely commit to just under 4˚ F warming of the
globe relative to preindustrial," Mann continued. "That's a
world where the most extreme summers we've ever seen, like last
summer, with its record heat and drought, decimated crops,
unprecedented wildfires, and devastating Superstorm Sandy, will be
the typical summer. And the extreme summers? There is no analog in
our past for what that would look like."
That
world is just decades, even years away. I won't recite a full list of
dangers a world like this holds—the one that includes displaced
climate refugees, tensions over diminishing resources, increased
reach of tropical diseases, battered coastal populations—but
suffice to say that the 400 ppm world and its successors can be ugly
places.
The
Arctic is already melted. Sea
levels are rapidly rising.
We've seen a full 1˚ F of temperature rise since
mid-century. Scientists are predicting that climate change is indeed
going to devastate plant and animal habitats worldwide,
much as it did in the Pliocene. This is the 400 ppm world, and it's
upon us. The only question now is if we're going to keep cranking the
central heat—are we going to turn this sauna into an inferno? We'd
have to embrace a whiplash transition away from fossil fuels and
towards clean energy—otherwise we can say hello to planet hotbox.
"Fortunately, there is still time to avoid that future," Mann says. "But not a whole lot of time. Breaching the sobering milestone of 400 ppm simply puts an exclamation mark on that."
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