Some
Credible Scientists Believe Humanity Is Irreparably Close to
Destruction
By
Nathan Curry
20
August, 2013
If
you were to zoom out and take a comparative look back at our planet
during the 1950s from some sort of cosmic time-travelling orbiter
cube, you would probably first notice that millions of pieces of
space trash had disappeared from orbit.
The
moon would appear six and a half feet closer to Earth, and the
continents of Europe and North America would be four feet closer
together. Zooming in, you would be able to spot some of the
industrial clambering of the Golden
Age of Capitalism
in the West and some of the stilted attempts at the Great
Leap Forward in
the East. Lasers, bar codes, contraceptives, hydrogen bombs,
microchips, credit cards, synthesizers, superglue, Barbie dolls,
pharmaceuticals, factory farming, and distortion pedals would just be
coming into existence.
There
would be two thirds fewer humans on the planet than there are now.
Over a million different species of plants and animals would exist
that have since gone extinct. There would be 90 percent more
fish, a billion less tons of plastic, and 40 percent more
phytoplankton (producers of half the planet’s oxygen) in the
oceans. There would be twice as many trees covering the land and
about three times more drinking water available from ancient
aquifers. There would be about 80 percent more ice covering the
northern pole during the summer season and 30 percent less carbon
dioxide and methane in the atmosphere. The list goes on...
Most
educated and semi-concerned people know that these sorts of sordid
details make up the backdrop of our retina-screened, ethylene-ripened
story of progress, but what happens when you start stringing them all
together?
If Doomsday
Preppers,
the highest rated show on the National Geographic Channel is any
indication, the general public seems to be getting ready for some
sort of societal collapse. There have always been doomsday prophets
and cults around and everyone has their own personal view of how the
apocalypse will probably go down (ascension of pure souls, zombie
crows), but in the midst of all of the Mayan Calendar/Timewave
Zero/Rapture babble, there are some clarion calls coming from a crowd
that’s less into bugout bags and eschatology: well-respected
scientists and journalists who have come to some scarily-sane
sounding conclusions about the threat of human-induced climate change
on the survival of the human species.
Recent
data seems to suggest that we may have already tripped several
irrevocable, non-linear, positive feedback loops (melting of
permafrost, methane hydrates, and arctic sea ice) that make an
average global temperature increase of only 2°C by 2100 seem like a
fairy tale. Instead, we’re talking 4°C, 6°C, 10°C, 16°C
(????????) here.
The
link between rapid climate change and human extinction is basically
this: the planet becomes uninhabitable
by humans
if the average temperature goes up by 4-6°C. It doesn’t sound like
a lot because we’re used to the temperature changing 15°C
overnight, but the thing that is not mentioned enough is that even a
2-3°C average increase would give us temperatures that regularly
surpass 40°C (104°F) in North America and Europe, and soar even
higher near the equator. Human bodies start to break down after six
hours at a wet-bulb (100% humidity) temperature of 35°C (95°F).
This makes the
2003 heat wave in Europe that killed over 70,000 people
seem like not a very big deal.
Factoring
in the increase we’re already seeing in heat waves, droughts,
wildfires, massive storms, food and water shortages, deforestation,
ocean acidification, and sea level rise some are seeing the writing
on the wall:
We’re all gonna die!
If
you want to freak yourself the fuck out, spend a few hours trying to
refute the mounting evidence
of our impending doom
heralded by the man who gave the Near Term Extinction movement its
name, Guy McPherson, on his blog Nature
Bats Last.
McPherson is a former Professor Emeritus of Natural Resources and
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Arizona, who
left his cushy tenured academic career and now lives in a straw-bale
house on a sustainable commune in rural New Mexico in an attempt to
“walk
away from Empire.”
There are a lot of interviews
and videos
available of Dr. McPherson talking about NTE if you want to boost
your pessimism about the future to suicidal/ruin-any-dinner-party
levels.
If
you are in need of an ultimate mind-fuck, there is a long essay on
McPherson’s site entitled “The
Irreconcilable Acceptance of Near Term Extinction”
written by a lifelong environmental activist named Daniel Drumright.
He writes about trying to come to terms with what it means to be on a
clear path toward extinction now that it’s probably too late to do
anything about it (hint: suicide or shrooms). As Drumright points
out, the entirety of human philosophy, religion, and politics doesn’t
really provide a framework for processing the psychological terror of
all of humanity not existing in the near future.
Outside of the
official NTE enclave, there are a lot of scientists and journalists
who would probably try to avoid being labeled as NTE proponents, but
are still making the same sort of dire predictions about our
collective fate. They may not believe that humans will ALL be gone by
mid-century, but massive, catastrophic “population decline” due
to human-induced rapid climate change is not out of the
picture.
James Hansen, the former head of NASA’s Goddard
Institute for Space Studies and one of the world’s leading
climatologists has recently retired from his position after 43 years
in order to concentrate on climate-change activism. He predicts that
without full de-carbonization by 2030, global CO2
emissions will be 16 times higher than in 1950, guaranteeing
catastrophic climate change. In an essay published in April of this
year, Hansen states:
“If
we should ‘succeed’ in digging up and burning all fossil fuels,
some parts of the planet would become literally uninhabitable, with
some times during the year having wet bulb temperatures exceeding
35°C. At such temperatures, for reasons of physiology and physics,
humans cannot survive… it is physically impossible for the
environment to carry away the 100W of metabolic heat that a human
body generates when it is at rest. Thus even a person lying quietly
naked in hurricane force winds would be unable to survive.”
Bill
McKibben, prominent green journalist, author, distinguished scholar,
and one of the founders of 350.org—the
movement that aims to reduce atmospheric CO2
levels to 350ppm in the hopes of avoiding runaway climate
change—wrote a book in 2011 called Eaarth:
Making a Life on a Tough New Planet.
In it he highlights current environmental changes that have put us
past
the predictions that had previously been reserved for the end of the
21st
century. He emphasizes that the popular political rhetoric that we
need to do something about climate change for our “grandchildren”
is sorely out of touch with reality. This is happening now. We’re
already living on a sci-fi planet from a parallel universe:
“The
Arctic ice cap is melting, the great glacier above Greenland is
thinning, both with disconcerting and unexpected speed. The oceans
are distinctly more acid and their level is rising…The greatest
storms on our planet, hurricanes and cyclones, have become more
powerful…The great rain forest of the Amazon is drying on its
margins…The great boreal forest of North America is dying in a
matter of years… [This] new planet looks more or less like our own
but clearly isn’t… This is the biggest thing that’s ever
happened.”
Peter
Ward is a paleontologist and author whose 2007 book Under
a Green Sky: Global Warming, the Mass Extinctions of the Past, and
What they Can Tell Us About the Future, provides
evidence that all but one of the major global extinction events
(dinosaurs) occurred due to rapid climate change caused by increased
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. This time around, the carbon
dioxide increase happens to be coming from humans figuring out how to
dig billions of tons of carbon out of the ground—and releasing it
into the air. Ward states that during the last 10,000 years in which
human civilization has emerged, our carbon dioxide levels and climate
have remained anomalously stable, but the future doesn’t look so
good:
“The average global temperature has changed as much as
18°F [8°C] in a few decades. The average global temperature is 59°F
[15°C]. Imagine that it shot to 75°F [24°C] or dropped to 40°F
[4°C], in a century or less. We have no experience of such a
world... at minimum, such sudden changes would create catastrophic
storms of unbelievable magnitude and fury...lashing the continents
not once a decade or century but several times each year...For most
of the last 100,000 years, an abruptly changing climate was the rule,
not the exception.”
Far from being a Mother Earth lover, Ward
has also developed an anti-Gaia hypothesis that he calls the “Medea
Hypothesis”
in which complex life, instead of being in symbiotic harmony with the
environment, is actually a horrible nuisance. In this hypothesis, the
planet and microbial life have worked together multiple times to
trigger mass extinction events that have almost succeeded in
returning the earth to its microbe-dominant state. In other words,
Mother Earth might be Microbe Earth and she might be trying to kill
her kids.
Scientists
are putting out the warning call that rapid, life-threatening climate
change lies ahead in our near future—but most are drowned out by
the political arguments and denialist rhetoric of climate change
skeptics. The well-funded effort by free market think tanks, energy
lobbyists, and industry advocates to blur the public perception of
climate science should come as no surprise. The thermodynamic forcing
effects of an ice-free artic by 2015 don’t seem so threatening if
you stand to gain billions of dollars by sending drill bits into the
potentially huge oil reservoirs there.
It may not be the case
that the southwest US will be uninhabitable by 2035, or that all of
human life will be extinguished in a generation, but we should
probably start to acknowledge and internalize what some of the people
who have given their lives to better understand this planet are
saying about it. It’s depressing to think that humans, in our
current state, could be the Omega Point of consciousness. Maybe
sentience and the knowledge of our inevitable death have given us a
sort of survival vertigo that we can’t overcome. As the separate
paths of environmental exploitation quickly and quietly converge
around us, we might just tumble off the precipice,
drunk on fossil fuels, making duck faces into black mirrors.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.