Dahr Jamail considers Guy McPherson and near-term human extinction
The
Climate Change Scorecard
17 Deecember, 2013
Since
a nuclear weapon went off over Hiroshima, we have been living with
visions of global catastrophe, apocalyptic end times, and extinction
that were once the sole property of religion. Since August 6,
1945, it has been possible for us to imagine how human beings, not
God, could put an end to our lives on this planet. Conceptually
speaking, that may be the single most striking development of our age
and, to this day, it remains both terrifying and hard to take in.
Nonetheless, the apocalyptic possibilities lurking in our
scientific-military development stirred popular culture over the
decades to a riot
of world-ending
possibilities.
In
more recent decades, a second world-ending (or at least
world-as-we-know-it ending) possibility has crept into human
consciousness. Until relatively recently, our burning of fossil
fuels and spewing
carbon dioxide into the atmosphere represented such a slow-motion
approach to end times that we didn’t even notice what was
happening. Only in the 1970s did the idea of global warming or
climate change begin to penetrate the scientific community, as in the
1990s it edged its way into the rest of our world, and slowly into
popular
culture,
too.
Still,
despite ever more powerful weather disruptions -- what the news now
likes to call “extreme
weather”
events, including monster typhoons,
hurricanes, and winter
storms,
wildfires,
heat waves, droughts,
and global
temperature records
-- disaster has still seemed far enough off. Despite a drumbeat
of news about startling environmental changes -- massive ice
melts
in Arctic waters, glaciers shrinking
worldwide, the Greenland ice shield beginning
to melt, as well as the growing acidification
of ocean waters -- none of this, not even Superstorm Sandy smashing
into
that iconic global capital, New York, and drowning part of its subway
system,
has broken through as a climate change 9/11. Not in the United
States anyway.
We’ve
gone, that is, from no motion to slow motion to a kind of denial of
motion. And yet in the scientific community, where people
continue to study the effects of global warming, the tone is
changing. It is, you might say, growing more apocalyptic.
Just in recent weeks, a report
from the National Academy of Scientists suggested
that “hard-to-predict sudden changes” in the environment due to
the effects of climate change might drive the planet to a “tipping
point.” Beyond that, “major and rapid changes [could]
occur” -- and these might be devastating, including that “wild
card,” the sudden melting of parts of the vast Antarctic ice shelf,
driving sea levels far higher.
At
the same time, the renowned climate scientist James Hansen and 17
colleagues published a hair-raising
report
in the journal PLoS.
They suggest
that the accepted target of keeping global temperature rise to two
degrees Celsius is a fool’s errand. If global temperatures
come anywhere near that level -- the rise so far has been less
than one degree
since the industrial revolution began -- it will already be too late,
they claim, to avoid disastrous consequences.
Consider
this the background “temperature” for Dahr Jamail’s latest
piece
for TomDispatch, an exploration of what climate scientists just
beyond the mainstream are thinking about how climate change will
affect life on this planet. What, in other words, is the worst
that we could possibly face in the decades to come? The answer:
a nightmare scenario. So buckle your seat belt. There’s
a tumultuous ride ahead.
Tom
Are
We Falling Off the Climate Precipice?
Scientists
Consider Extinction
By
Dahr
Jamail
I
grew up planning for my future, wondering which college I would
attend, what to study, and later on, where to work, which articles to
write, what my next book might be, how to pay a mortgage, and which
mountaineering trip I might like to take next.
Now,
I wonder about the future of our planet. During a recent visit with
my eight-year-old niece and 10- and 12-year-old nephews, I stopped
myself from asking them what they wanted to do when they grew up, or
any of the future-oriented questions I used to ask myself. I did so
because the reality of their generation may be that questions like
where they will work could be replaced by: Where will they get their
fresh water? What food will be available? And what parts of their
country and the rest of the world will still be habitable?
The
reason, of course, is climate change -- and just how bad it might be
came home to me in the summer of 2010. I was climbing Mount
Rainier in Washington State, taking the same route I had used in a
1994 ascent. Instead of experiencing the metal tips of the
crampons attached to my boots crunching into the ice of a glacier, I
was aware that, at high altitudes, they were still scraping against
exposed volcanic rock. In the pre-dawn night, sparks shot from my
steps.
The
route had changed dramatically enough to stun me. I paused at one
point to glance down the steep cliffs at a glacier bathed in soft
moonlight 100 meters below. It took my breath away when I realized
that I was looking at what was left of the enormous glacier I’d
climbed in 1994, the one that -- right at this spot -- had left those
crampons crunching on ice. I stopped in my tracks, breathing the
rarefied air of such altitudes, my mind working hard to grasp the
climate-change-induced drama that had unfolded since I was last at
that spot.
I
haven’t returned to Mount Rainier to see just how much further that
glacier has receded in the last few years, but recently I went on a
search to find out just how bad it might turn out to be. I discovered
a set of perfectly serious scientists -- not the majority of all
climate scientists by any means, but thoughtful outliers -- who
suggest that it isn’t just really, really bad; it’s
catastrophic. Some of them even think that, if the record
ongoing releases of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, thanks to the
burning of fossil fuels, are aided and abetted by massive releases of
methane, an even more powerful greenhouse gas, life as we humans have
known it might be at an end on this planet. They fear that we may be
at -- and over -- a climate change precipice hair-raisingly quickly.
Mind
you, the more conservative climate science types, represented by the
prestigious Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), paint
scenarios that are only modestly less hair-raising, but let’s spend
a little time, as I’ve done, with what might be called scientists
at the edge and hear just what they have to say.
“We’ve
Never Been Here as a Species”
“We
as a species have never experienced 400
parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere,” Guy
McPherson, professor emeritus of evolutionary biology, natural
resources, and ecology at the University of Arizona and a climate
change expert of 25 years, told me. “We’ve never been on a planet
with no Arctic ice, and we will hit the average of 400 ppm... within
the next couple of years. At that time, we’ll also see the loss of
Arctic ice in the summers… This planet has not experienced an
ice-free Arctic for at least the last three million years.”
For
the uninitiated, in the simplest terms, here’s what an ice-free
Arctic would mean when it comes to heating the planet: minus the
reflective ice cover on Arctic waters, solar radiation would be
absorbed, not reflected, by the Arctic Ocean. That would heat
those waters, and hence the planet, further. This effect has the
potential to change global weather patterns, vary the flow of winds,
and even someday possibly alter the position of the jet stream. Polar
jet streams are fast flowing rivers of wind positioned high in the
Earth’s atmosphere that push cold and warm air masses around,
playing a critical role in determining the weather of our planet.
McPherson,
who maintains the blog
Nature Bats Last, added, “We’ve never been here as a species and
the implications are truly dire and profound for our species and the
rest of the living planet.”
While
his perspective is more extreme than that of the mainstream
scientific community, which sees true disaster many decades into our
future, he’s far from the only scientist expressing such concerns.
Professor Peter Wadhams, a leading Arctic expert at Cambridge
University, has been measuring Arctic ice for 40 years, and his
findings underscore McPherson’s fears. “The fall-off in ice
volume is so fast it is going to bring us to zero very quickly,”
Wadhams told
a reporter. According to current data, he estimates “with 95%
confidence” that the Arctic will have completely ice-free summers
by 2018. (U.S. Navy researchers have predicted
an ice-free Arctic even earlier -- by 2016.)
British
scientist John Nissen, chairman of the Arctic Methane Emergency Group
(of which Wadhams is a member), suggests
that if the summer sea ice loss passes “the point of no return,”
and “catastrophic Arctic methane feedbacks” kick in, we’ll be
in an “instant planetary emergency.”
McPherson,
Wadham, and Nissen represent just the tip of a melting iceberg of
scientists who are now warning us about looming disaster, especially
involving Arctic methane releases. In the atmosphere, methane is a
greenhouse gas that, on a relatively short-term time scale, is far
more destructive than carbon dioxide (CO2). It is 23 times as
powerful as CO2 per molecule on a 100-year timescale, 105 times more
potent when it comes to heating the planet on a 20-year timescale --
and the Arctic permafrost, onshore and off, is packed with the
stuff. “The seabed,” says Wadham, “is offshore
permafrost, but is now warming and melting. We are now seeing great
plumes of methane bubbling up in the Siberian Sea… millions of
square miles where methane cover is being released.”
According
to a study just published in Nature
Geoscience,
twice as much methane as previously thought is being released from
the East Siberian Arctic Shelf, a two million square kilometer area
off the coast of Northern Siberia. Its researchers found that at
least 17 teragrams (one million tons) of methane are being released
into the atmosphere each year, whereas a 2010 study had found
only seven teragrams heading into the atmosphere.
The
day after Nature
Geoscience
released its study, a group of scientists from Harvard and other
leading academic institutions published
a report in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences
showing that the amount of methane being emitted in the U.S. both
from oil and agricultural operations could be 50% greater than
previous estimates and 1.5 times higher than estimates of the
Environmental Protection Agency.
How
serious is the potential global methane build-up? Not
all scientists
think it’s an immediate threat or even the major threat we face,
but Ira Leifer, an atmospheric and marine scientist at the University
of California, Santa Barbara, and one of the authors of the recent
Arctic Methane study pointed out to me that “the Permian mass
extinction that occurred 250 million years ago is related to methane
and thought to be the key to what caused the extinction of most
species on the planet.” In that extinction episode, it is estimated
that 95% of all species were wiped out.
Also
known as “The Great Dying,” it was triggered by a massive lava
flow in an area of Siberia that led to an increase in global
temperatures of six degrees Celsius. That, in turn, caused the
melting of frozen methane deposits under the seas. Released
into the atmosphere, it caused temperatures to skyrocket further. All
of this occurred over a period of approximately 80,000 years.
We
are currently in the midst of what scientists consider the sixth mass
extinction in planetary history, with between 150 and 200 species
going extinct daily, a pace 1,000 times greater than the “natural”
or “background” extinction rate. This event may already be
comparable to, or even exceed, both the speed and intensity of the
Permian mass extinction. The difference being that ours is human
caused, isn’t going to take 80,000 years, has so far lasted just a
few centuries, and is now gaining speed in a non-linear fashion.
It
is possible that, on top of the vast quantities of carbon dioxide
from fossil fuels that continue to enter the atmosphere in record
amounts
yearly, an increased release of methane could signal the beginning of
the sort of process that led to the Great Dying. Some scientists fear
that the situation is already so serious and so many self-reinforcing
feedback loops are already in play that we are in the process of
causing our own extinction. Worse yet, some are convinced that it
could happen far more quickly than generally believed possible --
even in the course of just the next few decades.
The
Sleeping Giant Stirs
According
to a NASA
research report, “Is a Sleeping Climate Giant Stirring in the
Arctic?”: “Over hundreds of millennia, Arctic permafrost soils
have accumulated vast stores of organic carbon -- an estimated 1,400
to 1,850 petagrams of it (a petagram is 2.2 trillion pounds, or 1
billion metric tons). That's about half of all the estimated organic
carbon stored in Earth's soils. In comparison, about 350 petagrams of
carbon have been emitted from all fossil-fuel combustion and human
activities since 1850. Most of this carbon is located in
thaw-vulnerable top soils within 10 feet (3 meters) of the surface.”
NASA
scientists, along with others, are learning that the Arctic
permafrost -- and its stored carbon -- may not be as permanently
frosted as its name implies. Research scientist Charles Miller
of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory is the principal investigator of
the Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (CARVE), a
five-year NASA-led field campaign to study how climate change is
affecting the Arctic's carbon cycle. He told NASA, "Permafrost
soils are warming even faster than Arctic air temperatures -- as much
as 2.7 to 4.5 degrees Fahrenheit (1.5 to 2.5 degrees Celsius) in just
the past 30 years. As heat from Earth's surface penetrates into
permafrost, it threatens to mobilize these organic carbon reservoirs
and release them into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide and methane,
upsetting the Arctic's carbon balance and greatly exacerbating global
warming."
He
fears the potential results should a full-scale permafrost melt take
place. As he points out, “Changes in climate may trigger
transformations that are simply not reversible within our lifetimes,
potentially causing rapid changes in the Earth system that will
require adaptations by people and ecosystems."
The
recent
NASA study
highlights the discovery of active and growing methane vents up to
150 kilometers across. A scientist on a research ship in the area
described this as a bubbling as far as the eye can see in which the
seawater looks like a vast pool of seltzer. Between the summers of
2010 and 2011, in fact, scientists found that in the course of a year
methane vents only 30 centimeters across had grown a kilometer wide,
a 3,333% increase and an example of the non-linear rapidity with
which parts of the planet are responding to climate disruption.
Miller
revealed another alarming finding: "Some of the methane and
carbon dioxide concentrations we've measured have been large, and
we're seeing very different patterns from what models suggest,"
he said
of some of CARVE’s earlier findings. "We saw large,
regional-scale episodic bursts of higher than normal carbon dioxide
and methane in interior Alaska and across the North Slope during the
spring thaw, and they lasted until after the fall refreeze. To cite
another example, in July 2012 we saw methane levels over swamps in
the Innoko Wilderness that were 650 parts per billion higher than
normal background levels. That's similar to what you might find in a
large city."
Moving beneath the Arctic Ocean where methane hydrates -- often described as methane gas surrounded by ice -- exist, a March 2010 report in Science indicated that these cumulatively contain the equivalent of 1,000-10,000 gigatons of carbon. Compare this total to the 240 gigatons of carbon humanity has emitted into the atmosphere since the industrial revolution began.
A
study published
in the prestigious journal Nature this
July suggested that a 50-gigaton “burp” of methane from thawing
Arctic permafrost beneath the East Siberian sea is “highly possible
at anytime.” That would be the equivalent of at least 1,000
gigatons of carbon dioxide.
Even
the relatively staid IPCC has warned
of such a scenario: "The possibility of abrupt climate change
and/or abrupt changes in the earth system triggered by climate
change, with potentially catastrophic consequences, cannot be ruled
out. Positive feedback from warming may cause the release of carbon
or methane from the terrestrial biosphere and oceans."
In
the last two centuries, the amount of methane in the atmosphere has
increased from 0.7 parts per million to 1.7 parts per million. The
introduction of methane in such quantities into the atmosphere may,
some climate scientists fear, make increases in the global
temperature of four to six degrees Celsius inevitable.
The
ability of the human psyche to take in and grasp such information is
being tested. And while that is happening, yet more data continues to
pour in -- and the news is not good.
Out
of the Frying Pan, Into the Fire
Consider
this timeline:
*
Late 2007:
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) announces
that the planet will see a one degree Celsius temperature increase
due to climate change by 2100.
*
Mid-2009:
The
U.N. Environment Programme predicts
a 3.5C increase by 2100. Such an increase would remove habitat for
human beings on this planet, as nearly all the plankton in the oceans
would be destroyed, and associated temperature swings would kill off
many land plants. Humans have never lived on a planet at 3.5C above
baseline.
*
October 2009:
The
Hadley Centre for Meteorological Research releases
an updated prediction, suggesting a 4C temperature increase by 2060.
*
November 2009:
The
Global
Carbon Project,
which monitors the global carbon cycle, and the Copenhagen
Diagnosis,
a climate science report, predict 6C and 7C temperature increases,
respectively, by 2100.
*
2012:
The conservative International Energy Agency’s World Energy Outlook
report for that year states
that we are on track to reach a 2C increase by 2017.
A
briefing provided to the failed U.N. Conference of the Parties in
Copenhagen in 2009 provided this summary: “The long-term sea level
that corresponds to current CO2 concentration is about 23 meters
above today’s levels, and the temperatures will be 6 degrees C or
more higher. These estimates are based on real long-term climate
records, not on models.”
On
December 3rd, a study
by 18 eminent scientists, including the former head of NASA’s
Goddard Institute for Space Studies, James Hansen, showed that the
long-held, internationally agreed upon target to limit rises in
global average temperatures to 2 degrees Celsius was in error and far
above the 1C threshold that would need to be maintained in order to
avoid the effects of catastrophic climate change.
And
keep in mind that the various major assessments of future global
temperatures seldom assume the worst about possible self-reinforcing
climate feedback loops like the methane one.
“Things
Are Looking Really Dire”
Climate-change-related
deaths are already estimated
at five million annually, and the process seems to be accelerating
more rapidly than most climate models have suggested. Even
without taking into account the release of frozen methane in the
Arctic, some scientists are already painting a truly bleak picture of
the human future. Take Canadian Wildlife Service biologist Neil Dawe,
who in August told
a reporter
that he wouldn't be surprised if the generation after him witnessed
the extinction of humanity. All around the estuary near his office on
Vancouver Island, he has been witnessing the unraveling of “the web
of life,” and “it’s happening very quickly.”
"Economic
growth is the biggest destroyer of the ecology," Dawe says.
"Those people who think you can have a growing economy and a
healthy environment are wrong. If we don't reduce our numbers, nature
will do it for us." And he isn’t hopeful humans will be able
to save themselves. "Everything is worse and we're still doing
the same things. Because ecosystems are so resilient, they don't
exact immediate punishment on the stupid."
The
University of Arizona’s Guy McPherson has similar fears. “We will
have very few humans on the planet because of lack of habitat,” he
says. Of recent studies showing the toll temperature increases will
take on that habitat, he adds, “They are only looking at CO2 in the
atmosphere.”
Here’s
the question: Could some version of extinction or near-extinction
overcome humanity, thanks to climate change -- and possibly
incredibly fast? Similar things have happened in the past. Fifty-five
million years ago, a five degree Celsius rise in average global
temperatures seems to have occurred in just 13 years, according to a
study
published
in the October 2013 issue of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
A report
in the August 2013 issue of Science
revealed that in the near-term Earth’s climate will change 10 times
faster than at any other moment in the last 65 million years.
“The
Arctic is warming faster than anywhere else on the planet,” climate
scientist James Hansen has said.
“There are potential irreversible effects of melting the Arctic sea
ice. If it begins to allow the Arctic Ocean to warm up, and warm the
ocean floor, then we’ll begin to release methane hydrates. And if
we let that happen, that is a potential tipping point that we don’t
want to happen. If we burn all the fossil fuels then we certainly
will cause the methane hydrates, eventually, to come out and cause
several degrees more warming, and it’s not clear that civilization
could survive that extreme climate change.”
Yet,
long before humanity has burned all fossil fuel reserves on the
planet, massive amounts of methane will be released. While the human
body is potentially capable of handling a six to nine degree Celsius
rise in the planetary temperature, the crops and habitat we use for
food production are not. As McPherson put it, “If we see a
3.5 to 4C baseline increase, I see no way to have habitat. We are at
.85C above baseline and we’ve already triggered all these
self-reinforcing feedback loops.”
He
adds: “All the evidence points to a locked-in 3.5 to 5 degree C
global temperature rise above the 1850 ‘norm’ by mid-century,
possibly much sooner. This guarantees a positive feedback, already
underway, leading to 4.5 to 6 or more degrees above ‘norm’ and
that is a level lethal to life. This is partly due to the fact that
humans have to eat and plants can’t adapt fast enough to make that
possible for the seven to nine billion of us -- so we’ll die.”
If
you think McPherson’s comment about lack of adaptability goes over
the edge, consider that the rate of evolution trails the rate of
climate change by a factor of 10,000,
according to a paper
in the August 2013 issue of Ecology
Letters.
Furthermore, David Wasdel, director of the Apollo-Gaia Project and an
expert on multiple feedback dynamics, says, “We are experiencing
change 200 to 300 times faster than any of the previous major
extinction events.”
Wasdel
cites with particular alarm scientific reports showing that the
oceans have already lost
40%
of their phytoplankton, the base of the global oceanic food chain,
because of climate-change-induced acidification and atmospheric
temperature variations. (According
to
the Center for Ocean Solutions: “The oceans have absorbed almost
one-half of human-released CO2 emissions since the Industrial
Revolution. Although this has moderated the effect of greenhouse gas
emissions, it is chemically altering marine ecosystems 100 times more
rapidly than it has changed in at least the last 650,000 years.”)
“This
is already a mass extinction event,” Wasdel adds. “The question
is, how far is it going to go? How serious does it become? If we are
not able to stop the rate of increase of temperature itself, and get
that back under control, then a high temperature event, perhaps
another 5-6 degrees [C], would obliterate at least 60% to 80% of the
populations and species of life on Earth.”
What
Comes Next?
In
November 2012, even Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank Group
(an international financial institution that provides loans to
developing countries), warned
that “a 4C warmer world can, and must be, avoided. Lack of action
on climate change threatens to make the world our children inherit a
completely different world than we are living in today.”
A
World Bank-commissioned
report
warned that we are indeed on track to a “4C world” marked by
extreme heat waves and life-threatening sea-level rise.
The
three living diplomats who have led U.N. climate change talks claim
there is little chance the next climate treaty, if it is ever
approved, will prevent the world from overheating. "There is
nothing that can be agreed in 2015 that would be consistent with the
2 degrees," says Yvo de Boer, who was executive secretary of the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in 2009, when
attempts to reach a deal at a summit in Copenhagen crumbled. "The
only way that a 2015 agreement can achieve a 2-degree goal is to shut
down the whole global economy."
Atmospheric
and marine scientist Ira Leifer is particularly concerned about the
changing rainfall patterns a recently leaked
IPCC draft report suggested for our future: “When I look at what
the models predicted for a 4C world, I see very little rain over vast
swaths of populations. If Spain becomes like Algeria, where do all
the Spaniards get the water to survive? We have parts of the world
which have high populations which have high rainfall and crops that
exist there, and when that rainfall and those crops go away and the
country starts looking more like some of North Africa, what keeps the
people alive?”
The
IPCC report suggests that we can expect a generalized shifting of
global rain patterns further north, robbing areas that now get
plentiful rain of future water supplies. History shows us that when
food supplies collapse, wars begin, while famine and disease spread.
All of these things, scientists now fear, could happen on an
unprecedented scale, especially given the interconnected nature of
the global economy.
“Some
scientists are indicating we should make plans to adapt to a 4C
world,” Leifer comments. “While prudent, one wonders what portion
of the living population now could adapt to such a world, and my view
is that it’s just a few thousand people [seeking refuge] in the
Arctic or Antarctica.”
Not
surprisingly, scientists with such views are often not the most
popular guys in the global room. McPherson, for instance, has often
been labeled “Guy McStinction” -- to which he responds, “I’m
just reporting the results from other scientists. Nearly all of these
results are published in established, esteemed literature. I don’t
think anybody is taking issue with NASA, or Nature,
or Science,
or the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
[Those] and the others I report are reasonably well known and come
from legitimate sources, like NOAA [the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration], for example. I’m not making this
information up, I’m just connecting a couple of dots, and it’s
something many people have difficulty with.”
McPherson
does not hold out much hope for the future, nor for a governmental
willingness to make anything close to the radical changes that would
be necessary to quickly ease the flow of greenhouse gases into the
atmosphere; nor does he expect the mainstream media to put much
effort into reporting on all of this because, as he says, “There’s
not much money in the end of civilization, and even less to be made
in human extinction.” The destruction of the planet, on the other
hand, is a good bet, he believes, “because there is money in this,
and as long as that’s the case, it is going to continue.”
Leifer,
however, is convinced that there is a moral obligation never to give
up and that the path to global destruction could be altered. “In
the short term, if you can make it in the economic interests of
people to do the right thing, it’ll happen very fast.” He offers
an analogy when it comes to whether humanity will be willing to act
to mitigate the effects of climate change: “People do all sorts of
things to lower their risk of cancer, not because you are guaranteed
not to get it, but because you do what you can and take out the
health protections and insurance you need in order to try to lower
your risk of getting it.”
The
signs of a worsening climate crisis are all around us, whether we
allow ourselves to see them or not. Certainly, the scientific
community gets it. As do countless communities across the globe where
the effects of climate change are already being experienced in
striking ways and local preparations
for climatic disasters, including increasingly powerful floods,
droughts, wildfires, heat waves, and storms are underway.
Evacuations from low-lying South Pacific islands have already begun.
People in such areas, out of necessity, are starting to try to teach
their children how to adapt to, and live in, what we are causing our
world to become.
My
niece and nephews are doing something similar. They are growing
vegetables in a backyard garden and their eight chickens provide more
than enough eggs for the family. Their parents are intent on
teaching them how to be ever more self-sustaining. But none of
these heartfelt actions can mitigate what is already underway when it
comes to the global climate.
I
am 45 years old, and I often wonder how my generation will survive
the impending climate crisis. What will happen to our world if the
summer Arctic waters are indeed ice-free only a few years from now?
What will my life look like if I live to experience a 3.5 Celsius
global temperature increase?
Above
all, I wonder how coming generations will survive.
Dahr
Jamail has written extensively about climate change as well as the BP
oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. He is a recipient of numerous
awards, including the Martha Gellhorn Award for Journalism and the
James Aronson Award for Social Justice Journalism. He is the author
of two books: Beyond
the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied
Iraq
and The
Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan.
He currently works for al-Jazeera English in Doha, Qatar.
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