The
Dangerous Myth That Climate Change Is Reversible
by
Joe Romm
Melting polar ice is a stern reminder of the irreversibility of climate change. (Photo: Len Radin via Flickr)
17
March, 2013
The
CMO (Chief Misinformation Officer) of the climate ignorati, Joe
Nocera, has a new piece, “A
Real Carbon Solution.”
The biggest of its many errors comes in this line:
A
reduction of carbon emissions from Chinese power plants would do far
more to help reverse climate change
than — dare I say it? — blocking the Keystone XL oil pipeline.
Memo
to Nocera: As a NOAA-led paper explained 4 years ago, climate change
is “largely
irreversible for 1000 years.”
This
notion that we can reverse climate change by cutting emissions is one
of the most commonly held myths — and one of the most dangerous, as
explained in this 2007 MIT study, “Understanding
Public Complacency About Climate Change: Adults’ mental models of
climate change violate conservation of matter.”
The
fact is that, as RealClimate has
explained,
we would need “an immediate cut of around 60 to 70% globally and
continued further cuts over time” merely
to stabilize atmospheric concentrations
of CO2 – and that would still leave us with a radiative
imbalance that would lead to “an
additional 0.3 to 0.8ÂșC warming
over the 21st Century.” And that assumes no major carbon cycle
feedbacks kick in, which seems highly
unlikely.
We’d
have to drop total global emissions to zero now and for the rest of
the century just to lower concentrations enough to stop temperatures
from rising. Again, even in this implausible scenario, we still
aren’t talking about reversing climate change, just stopping it —
or, more technically, stopping the temperature rise. The great ice
sheets might well continue to disintegrate, albeit slowly.
This
doesn’t mean climate change is unstoppable — only that we are
stuck with whatever climate change we cause before we get desperate
and go all WWII on emissions. That’s why delay is so dangerous and
immoral. For instance, if we don’t act quickly, we are likely to be
stuck with permanent Dust Bowls in the Southwest and around the
globe. I’ll discuss the irreversibility myth further below the
jump.
First,
though, Nocera’s piece has many other pieces of misinformation. He
leaves people with the impression that coal with carbon capture and
storage (CCS) is a practical, affordable means of reducing emissions
from existing power plants that will be available soon. In fact, most
demonstration projects around the world have been shut down, the
technology Nocera focuses on would not work on the vast majority of
existing coal plants, and CCS is going to be incredibly expensive
compared to other low-carbon technologies — see Harvard
stunner: “Realistic” first-generation CCS costs a whopping $150
per ton of CO2 (20 cents per kWh)!
And that’s in the unlikely event it proves to be practical,
permanent, and verifiable (see “Feasibility,
Permanence and Safety Issues Remain Unresolved”).
Heck,
the guy who
debated me
on The
Economist‘s
website conceded things are going so slowly, writing “The
idea is that CCS then becomes a commercial reality and begins to make
deep cuts in emissions during the 2030s.”
And he’s a CCS advocate!!
Of
course, we simply don’t have until the 2030s to wait for deep cuts
in emissions. No wonder people who misunderstand the irreversible
nature of climate change, like Nocera, tend to be far more complacent
about emissions reductions than those who understand climate science.
The
point of Nocera’s piece seems to be to mock Bill McKibben for
opposing the idea of using captured carbon for enhanced oil recovery
(EOR): “his answer suggests that his crusade has blinded him to the
real problem.”
It
is Nocera who has been blinded. He explains in the piece:
Using
carbon emissions to recover previously ungettable oil has the
potential to unlock vast untapped American reserves. Last year,
ExxonMobil
reportedthat
enhanced oil recovery would allow it to extend the life of a single
oil field in West Texas by 20 years.
McKibben’s
effort to stop the Keystone XL pipeline is based on the fact that we
have to leave the vast majority of carbon in the ground. Sure, it
wouldn’t matter if you built one coal CCS plant and used that for
EOR. But we need a staggering amount of CCS, as Vaclav Smil
explained in “Energy
at the Crossroads“:
“Sequestering
a mere 1/10 of today’s global CO2 emissions (less than 3 Gt
CO2) would thus call for putting in place an industry that would have
to force underground every year the volume of compressed gas larger
than or (with higher compression) equal to the volume of crude oil
extracted globally by
[the] petroleum industry whose infrastructures and capacities have
been put in place over a century of development. Needless to say,
such a technical feat could not be accomplished within a single
generation.”
D’oh!
What precisely would be the point of “sequestering” all that CO2
to extract previously “ungettable oil” whose emissions, when
burned, would just about equal the CO2 that you supposedly
sequestered?
Remember,
we have to get total global emissions of CO2 to near zero just to
stop temperatures from continuing their inexorable march toward
humanity’s
self-destruction.
And yes, this ain’t easy. But it is impossible if we don’t start
slashing emissions soon and stop opening up vast new sources of
carbon.
For
those who are confused on this point, I recommend reading the
entire MIT study,
whose lead author is John Sterman. Here is the abstract:
Public
attitudes about climate change reveal a contradiction. Surveys show
most Americans believe climate change poses serious risks but also
that reductions in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions sufficient to
stabilize atmospheric GHG concentrations or net radiative forcing can
be deferred until there is greater evidence that climate change is
harmful. US policymakers likewise argue it is prudent to wait and see
whether climate change will cause substantial economic harm before
undertaking policies to reduce emissions. Such
wait-and-see policies erroneously presume climate change can be
reversed quickly should harm become evident, underestimating
substantial delays in the climate’s response to anthropogenic
forcing.
We report experiments with highly educated adults–graduate students
at MIT–showing widespread misunderstanding of the fundamental stock
and flow relationships, including mass balance principles, that lead
to long response delays. GHG emissions are now about twice the rate
of GHG removal from the atmosphere.
GHG
concentrations will therefore continue to rise even if emissions
fall, stabilizing only when emissions equal removal. In contrast,
results show most
subjects believe atmospheric GHG concentrations can be stabilized
while emissions into the atmosphere continuously exceed the removal
of GHGs from it.
These beliefs-analogous to arguing a bathtub filled faster than it
drains will never overflow-support wait-and-see policies but violate
conservation of matter. Low public support for mitigation policies
may be based more on misconceptions of climate dynamics than high
discount rates or uncertainty about the risks of harmful climate
change.
It’s
also worth reading RealClimate’s piece “Climate
change commitments,” based
on a Nature
Geoscience
letter by Mathews
and Weaver
(sub. reqd.), which has this figure:
Again,
zero emissions merely stops climate change, and obviously, thanks to
fossil-fuel funded Tea Party politicians along with the deniers and
the ignorati, we won’t be going to zero anytime soon.
But
you have to remember that the climate changes so far, both observed
and committed to, are minor compared with the business-as-usual
forecast for the end of the century. It’s further emissions we need
to worry about. Climate change is like a ratchet, which we wind up by
releasing CO2.
Once we turn the crank, there’s no easy turning back to the natural
climate. But we can still decide to stop turning the crank, and the
sooner the better.
Indeed,
we are only committed to about 2°C total warming so far, which is a
probably manageable — and even more probably, if we did keep CO2
concentrations from peaking below 450 ppm, the small amount of CO2 we
are likely to be able to remove from the atmosphere this century
could well take us below the danger zone.
But
if we don’t reverse emissions trends soon, we will at least double
and probably triple that temperature rise, most likely negating any
practical strategy to undo the impacts for hundreds of years.
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