Climate
change disaster unfolds: 'We have lost our stable climate'
We have lost our stable climate. Likely permanently. Rates of change are greatly exceeding anything in the paleorecords. By at least 10x, and more likely >30x. We are heading to a much warmer world. The transition will be brutal for civilization.global-warming
Dorsi
Diaz
21
August, 2013
Most
of us have had that funny feeling that there is something not quite
right with our weather and climate recently. We discuss it on
FaceBook, mention it to the cashier at the store and maybe even talk
about it at the dinner table. Musings like, "Wow the weather
sure has been weird lately" and "It's so hot, it has never
been this hot before". Every day now (depending
on what media outlet you listen to) you
will see headlines aboutrecord flooding,
record rainfall, record heat, recordstorms, record tornadoes, record fires
and record hurricanes.
"Record" seems
to be the new buzz word when we talk about the climate nowadays.
One
thing you can rest assured in though is that it really is
not a
figment of your imagination. The climate is indeed changing - and
rapidly. So fast that it's startling even climate scientists and
blowing previous "computer modelings" out the window.
So
what really is going here?
A lot.
When
the earth enters into certain periods and reaches certain "tipping
points", weather and climate can change very very fast.
According to a report by
the Pentagon: An Abrupt
Climate Change Scenario
and Its Implications for US National Security,
it can change so fast that we can have catastrophicclimate
change within
a period of mere years - a state we call "abrupt climate
change". Abrupt climate change comes when those tipping points
are reached or surpassed, much like a runway train without brakes or
a snowball rolling down a hill at high speed.
In
a nutshell, it's a point none of us ever wanted to see in our
lifetimes. But the sad reality of it is that we are.
Paul
Beckwith, part-time professor and a PhD student with the laboratory
for paleoclimatology and climatology at the University of Ottawa,
recently had some startling things to say about what's happening to
our climate. Beckwith says that we have now entered into a period of
"abrupt climate change" and that we can now expect that
runaway train to gain even more speed. Because some dangerous
feedback loops have been put into action, our jet stream has been
affected (think of it like this - the "conveyor belt" on
earths air conditioner is now loose and wandering in areas it never
has - hence the reason we are seeing mass amounts of rainfall being
dumped in very short periods of time in unlucky areas)
Beckwith's
statement on
where we stand now:
"Abrupt
climate change. It
is happening today, big time.
The northern hemisphere atmospheric circulation system is doing its
own thing, without the guidance of a stable jet stream. The jet
stream is fractured into meandering and stuck streaked segments,
which are hoovering up water vapor and directing it day after day to
unlucky localized regions, depositing months or seasons worth of rain
in only a few days, turning these locales into water worlds and
trashing all infrastructure like houses, roads, train tracks and
pipelines and also creating massive sinkholes and catastrophic
landslides. And climate change is only getting warmed up.
In
the Arctic, methane is coming out of the thawing permafrost. Both on
land and under the ocean on the sea floor. The
Yedoma permafrost in Siberia is now belching out methane at greatly
accelerated rates due to intense warming. The
collapsing sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is exposing the open ocean to
greatly increased solar absorption and turbulent mixing from wave
action due to persistent cyclonic activity. Massive cyclonic activity
will trash large portions of the sea ice if positioned to export
broken ice via the Fram Strait.
What
does it all mean?
We have lost our stable climate. Likely permanently. Rates of change are greatly exceeding anything in the paleorecords. By at least 10x, and more likely >30x. We are heading to a much warmer world. The transition will be brutal for civilization.global-warming
Can
we avoid this? Stop it? Probably not. Not
with climate reality being suppressed by corporations and their
government employees in their relentless push for more and more
fossil fuel infrastructure and mining and drilling.
Craziness,
in a nutshell. Temperatures
over land surfaces in the far north have been consistently over 25 C
for weeks, due to persistent high pressure atmospheric blocks,
leading to clear skies and unblocked solar exposure. Water
temperatures in rivers and streams in the far north have resulted in
large fish kills as their ecological mortality thresholds have been
exceeded. Many other regions are experiencing strange incidences of
animal mortality. Mass migrations of animals towards the poles are
occurring on land and sea, at startling rates, in an effort for more
hospitable surroundings for survival. Shifting food source
distributions is causing even hardier, less vulnerable species to be
severely stressed. For example, dolphins are being stranded or dying,
birds are dropping out of the sky, and new parasites and bacteria are
proliferating with warmer temperatures.
In
regions of the world undergoing severe droughts the vegetation and
soils are drying and fires are exploding in size, frequency, and
severity. Especially
hard-hit are large regions of the US southwest, southern Europe, and
large swaths of Asia. Who
knows if forests that are leveled by fire will eventually be
reforested; it all depends on what type of climate establishes in the
region.
What
about coastal regions around the world and sea levels? Not looking
too good for the home team. In 2012 Greenland tossed off about 700 Gt
(Gt=billion tons) of sea ice, from both melting and calving. As the
ice melts, it is darkening from concentrated contaminants being
exposed, from much greater areas of low albedo meltwater pools, and
from fresh deposits of black carbon ash from northern forest fires.
Even more worrying are ominous signs of increasing movement. GPS
sensor anchored to the 3 km thick glaciers hundreds of kms from the
coast are registering increased sliding. Meltwater moulins are
chewing through the ice from the surface to the bedrock and are
transporting heat downward, softening up the ice bonded to the
bedrock and allowing sliding. Eventually, large chunks will slide
into the ocean causing tsunamis and abrupt sea level rises. Many
regions of the sea floor around Greenland are scarred from enormous
calving episodes in the past.
Coastal
Flooding
On
a positive note, this knowledge of our changing climate threat is
filtering out to greater numbers of the slumbering public that has
been brainwashed into lethargy by the protectors of the status
quo. As
more and more people see the trees dying in their back yards and
their cities and houses and roads buckling under unrelenting
torrential rains, they are awaking to the threat. And
there will be a threshold crossed and a tipping point reached in
human behavior with an understanding of the reality of the risks we
face. And finally global concerted action. To slash emissions. And
change our ways. And retool our economies and reset our
priorities. And
not take our planet for granted."
In
a leaked report of the latest IPCC report on climate change, much of
what Beckwith says is mirrored in the report (the report has not yet
been published however - in it's final form it may be subject to
being watered down and/or changed)
According
to sources close
to the report, there are some pretty startling and "terrifying"
things about to be revealed: "We're
on course to change the planet in a way "unprecedented in
hundreds to thousands of years." This is a general statement in
the draft report about the consequences of continued greenhouse gas
emissions "at or above current rates."
"Unprecedented
changes will sweep across planetary systems, ranging from sea level
to the acidification of the ocean."
So
yes, you were right. The
weather is weird and it is changing. The
question now is: "Can we do something to stop this runaway
train?" or did we already give it enough fuel to go even faster?
Another
interesting article here about tipping points and abrupt climate
change: The
Tipping Point and its Effects: a Global Climate Climate Change
Warming Point of No Return,
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