Climatic
tipping points, stories about our possible future
"Tipping
Points"
6-part TV climate series begins airing at 9 pm EDT Saturday, October
19 on The Weather Channel
19
October, 2013
How
does one tell the most important story of our time--the emergence of
our great Climate Disruption--without boring one's audience to tears,
but at the same time, not resorting to over-hyped spinning of the
science? "Tipping
Points", a landmark 6-part TV series that begins airing at 9
pm EDT Saturday, October 19 on The Weather Channel, aims to do just
that. "Tipping Points" follows a group of preeminent
scientists as they venture off the grid to explore the perilous
tipping points making our weather systems more extreme and
unpredictable.
The
phenomena of "tipping points" follows the concept that, at
a particular moment in time, a small change can have a large,
long-term consequence on a fragile climate system already in a state
of flux. Localized ecological systems are known to shift abruptly and
irreversibly from one state to another when they are forced across
critical thresholds. Further, when the situation is pushed past the
"tipping point," it will potentially lead to a chain
reaction, putting other ecosystems around the globe in peril.
"Tipping
Points" will feature several of the most critical examples,
including the collapse of the Greenland ice sheet, total melting of
the Himalayan icecap glaciers, die-back of the Amazon rainforest,
shutdown of the Atlantic Thermohaline Circulation, and the rapid melt
of the permafrost in Siberia. "Tipping Points" will not
only show how climate changes affect local communities in exotic and
distant locales like the Amazon or Siberia, but how it impacts and is
relevant to people from Australia and Asia to Europe, South America
to Canada and every community in between. The series explores what is
happening at the most dramatic tipping points and looks to find
answers to understand what can be done to stem the tide of change
before we do irreparable damage, and ultimately put our own lives at
risk.
The
series is hosted by polar explorer and climate journalist Bernice
Notenboom, the first woman to climb Mt. Everest and walk to the North
and South Poles. She is joined by a number of leading international
environmental scientists in each episode, such as Dr. Jason Box, Dr.
Matthew England, Professor Peter Cox, and more. In each episode,
Notenboom heads off to a far corner of the world to find scientists
in the field undertaking vital climate research to try to understand
how the climate system is changing and how long we have to make
significant changes before we reach a tipping point--a point of no
return when our climate system will be changed irreversibly.
The
first episode at 9 pm EDT/8 pm CDT this Saturday will be "Amazon
Rainforest Risks". "Tipping Points" host Bernice
Notenboom will join Peter Cox, Professor of Climate System Dynamics
at the University of Exeter, on an expedition across the vast Amazon
Rainforest to explore the mega droughts and tree deaths occurring
that threaten the forest's survival this century. The Amazon stores
CO2 in its soils and biomass equivalent to about fifteen years of
human-caused emissions, so a massive die-back of the forest could
greatly accelerate global warming. Photosynthesis in the world's
largest rainforest keeps the Earth cooler by taking about 2 billion
tons of carbon dioxide out of the air each year.
However,
exceptional droughts in both 2005 and 2010 reversed this process. The
Amazon emitted 3 billion tons of CO2 to the atmosphere in 2005,
causing a net 5 billion ton increase in CO2 to the
atmosphere--roughly equivalent to 19% of the total CO2 emissions to
the atmosphere from burning fossil fuels that year. A 2013 NASA-led
study found that an area of the Amazon rainforest twice the size of
California continues to suffer from the effects of the 2005 mega
drought. A 2008 paper by Professor Cox warned that their climate
model predicted a rapidly increasing risk of 2005-like droughts from
1-in-20 years in the present climate to 1-in-2 years by 2025, if we
continue emitting CO2 at our current "business-as-usual"
pace
See
the website HERE
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