Excellent journalism, as usual, from Dahr Jamal.
Warming Has Been "Hugely Underestimated"
Warming Has Been "Hugely Underestimated"
Dahr
Jamail
20
October, 2014
As
we look across the globe this month, the signs of a continued
escalation of the impacts of runaway anthropogenic climate disruption
(ACD) continue to increase, alongside a drumbeat of fresh scientific
studies confirming their connection to the ongoing human
geo-engineering project of emitting carbon dioxide at ever-increasing
rates into the atmosphere.
A
major
study recently published
in New Scientist found that "scientists may have hugely
underestimated the extent of global warming because temperature
readings from southern hemisphere seas were inaccurate," and
said that ACD is "worse than we thought" because it is
happening "faster than we realized."
As
has become predictable now, as evidence of increasing ACD continues
to mount, denial and corporate exploitation are accelerating right
along with it.
The famed Northwest Passage is now being exploited by luxury cruise companies. Given the ongoing melting of the Arctic ice cap, a company recently announced a 900-mile, 32-day luxury cruise there, with fares starting at $20,000, so people can luxuriate while viewing the demise of the planetary ecosystem.
This, while even mainstream scientists now no longer view ACD in the future tense, but as a reality that is already well underway and severely impacting the planet.
It
is good that even the more conservative scientists have come aboard
the reality train, because a recent National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration-led (NOAA) study
published by the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society has
provided yet more evidence linking ACD with extreme heat events.
To
provide perspective on how far along we are regarding runaway ACD,
another recent
study
shows that the planet's wildlife population is less than half the
size it was four decades ago. The culprits are both ACD and
unsustainable human consumption, coupling to destroy habitats faster
than previously thought, as biodiversity loss has now reached
"critical levels," according to the report. More than half
of the vertebrate population on the planet has been annihilated in
just four decades.
Let
that sink in for a moment before reading further.
Meanwhile,
the situation only continues to grow grimmer.
NASA
announced that this August was the hottest
globally since records began
in 1880. Days later, NOAA
confirmed this and added
that 2014 is on track to become the hottest year on record.
Shortly
thereafter, NASA announced that this September was the hottest since
1880.
And
emissions only continue to increase.
The
effects of all these developments are especially evident in the
Arctic, where sea ice coverage reached its annual minimum on
September 17, continuing a trend of below-average years. According to
the NASA-supported National Snow and Ice Data Center, Arctic sea ice
coverage this year is the
sixth lowest recorded
since 1978.
Equally
disconcerting and symptomatic of the aforementioned, 35,000
walruses crowded onto land
near the Northwest Alaska village of Point Lay late last month, when
they couldn't find their preferred resting grounds of summer sea ice.
Earth
The
European
Space Agency announced
that, due to billions of tons of ice loss, a dip in the gravity field
over the Western Antarctic region has occurred, making even gravity
itself the latest casualty of ACD.
A
recent
analysis of 56 studies
on ACD-related health problems revealed that increasing global
temperatures and extreme weather events will continue to
deleteriously impact human health on a global sale.
On
a micro-scale, another report showed how Minnesota's warming (and
increasingly wetter) climate is escalating the risk of new diseases
in the area, according
to the Minnesota Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment.
Further
north, warming temperatures continue
to disrupt
the fragile ecological balance in the Canadian Arctic, which is
warming faster than most of the rest of the planet. Canada's minister
for natural resources provided a new
report
detailing the impact ACD is having on that country's forests, which
are being impacted "faster than the global average."
In
neighboring Alaska, summer heat and invasive insects are taking a
similar toll on interior Alaska birch trees, according
to experts
there.
Wildlife
populations continue to struggle to adapt to the dramatic changes
wrought by ACD. In California, one of the largest populations of
state-protected Western pond turtles in the southern part of that
state is struggling
to survive
as its habitat, a natural two-mile long lake, has become a smelly,
severely alkaline death trap due to drought and fires there.
Of
course it isn't just wildlife that is struggling to adapt and cope
with ACD.
Members
of the Swinomish tribe, located north of Seattle, were recently
awarded a large grant from the federal government in order to deal
with rising seas and flooding,
as they live near the mouth of the Skagit River.
Water
The
extremes of water, flooding and drought continue to persist and
escalate as ACD continue.
In
California, where record-breaking drought is becoming a way of life
for much of the state, at least 14
communities are on the brink of waterlessness
and are trucking in water while trying to find a solution.
In
East Porterville, a small rural community in Tulare County,
California, the situation has become so
desperate
that residents are no longer able to flush toilets, fill a glass with
water or wash their hands without using bottled water.
Dairy
farmers in that state are struggling
to survive
the drought, as the cost for feed and water is being driven up by the
lack of water.
The
US Energy Information Administration announced that California's
ability to produce electricity from hydroelectric dams is being
significantly
hampered
by the drought, which covers 100 percent of the state now. This is
because the reservoirs, which create power when the water in them is
released into turbines, are drying up, thus providing less pressure
to spin the turbines. The first six months of this year have seen the
state's hydropower generation decrease by half.
And
it's not just California that is experiencing drought. The better
part of the entire Western Hemisphere has experienced some form of
drought in recent years, according to another
recent report
published in the journal Science which states: "A dry spell has
killed cattle and wiped out crops in Central America, parts of
Colombia have seen rioting over scarce water, and southern Brazil is
facing its worst dry spell in 50 years."
Across
the Atlantic, at a recent international conference that was held to
discuss the growing global water crisis, experts
warned
that Britain must prepare for the "worst droughts in modern
times."
In
Iran, worshippers have sought
divine intervention
and they're being urged to literally pray for rain.
An
excellent
report by National Geographic
asked a critical question: What will happen to the American West,
which has been built upon the back of snowmelt, when the snows fail?
On
the other end of the water spectrum - melting and flooding - we
continue to see global evidence of the impact of ACD. The
aforementioned recent satellite observations from the US National
Snow and Ice Data Center revealed in October that the Arctic ice cap
has melted so much that open water is now a mere 350 miles from the
North Pole, which is the shortest distance ever recorded, according
to scientists.
This
coincides with predictions from leading British and American polar
researchers that Truthout
has previously interviewed
who predict the ice cap will melt completely during the summer as
early as next year.
A
recent
report
by the Union for Concerned Scientists warned that several major US
cities will see at least 10 times more coastal flooding by 2045, in
addition to at least 11 inches of sea level rise by the same year.
In
Delaware, they aren't waiting. There, millions of dollars have been
spent to pump sand in to build up dunes along the beaches in order to
create
a buffer
from future storms and sea level rise.
Down
in Miami, hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent to install
new storm pumps and storm drains
in order to combat sea level rise at Miami Beach. Near the Cape
Canaveral area, a low-lying barrier island is getting even lower as
sea levels continue to rise, so communities there are investigating
ways
to keep the water at bay, or to plan a retreat.
Edmonton,
Canada, is pushing forward with a $2.4 billion bill for flood
prevention,
as that city is seeing increasingly severe downpours.
Southern
France experienced a deluge
of 10 inches of rain in just three hours, which amounted to half a
year's worth of rain in one day in Montpellier.
In
Norway, massive amounts of melt-water from streams and blue ice on
mountains indicated that the ice fields and glaciers on central
Norway's highest peaks were in full
retreat,
and exposed rock and ice that had not been seen for 6,000 years. On
that note, recent
studies also show
that sea-level rise over the last century (20 centimeters) has been
unmatched in 6,000 years.
Recent
reports indicate
that the Gulf of Alaska has become unusually warm, warmer in fact
than since researchers began tracking surface water temperatures in
the 1980s, according to NOAA.
In
the Atlantic, lobsters off the coast of southern New England are
moving
up into Canada due to warming waters. The exotic lionfish, native to
the Indo-Pacific, is also heading
north
up the Atlantic coast, as warming waters are changing ocean habitats.
In
Greenland, "dark" snow atop the ice sheet is now being
called a "positive feedback loop" by an expert
there, as the increasing trend is reducing the Arctic's ability to
reflect sunlight, further contributing to runaway ACD.
Recent
analysis indicates that scientists could have underestimated the size
of the heat sink across the upper ocean, according to a recent
report.
The study,
published in Nature Climate Change, found that the upper 700 meters
of the ocean have been warming 24
to 55 percent
faster since 1970 than previously thought. This means that the pace
and scale of planetary warming is much faster than previously
believed.
Lastly
in this section, and possibly the most distressing, a recent
report
revealed that fish are failing to adapt to increasing carbon dioxide
levels in the oceans. This means that within just a few generations
of fish, a mass die-off could occur due to lack of adaptation. More
carbon dioxide in the oceans is adversely changing the behavior of
fish through generations, which means that marine species may never
fully adapt to their changing environment.
Air
A
study
published
in Geophysical Research Letters showed that tornado activity in
"Tornado Alley" in the Midwestern United States is peaking
two weeks earlier than it did 50 years ago, and ACD is the culprit.
Erratic
jet stream behavior is now believed to be caused
by the rapid retreating of Arctic sea ice as a result of ACD.
The increasingly unpredictable jet stream is being blamed for more
frequent, prolonged spells of extreme weather in Europe, North
America and Asia. This includes more and longer freezing
temperatures, storms and heat waves.
In
October, California found itself in yet another heat wave, with
record-breaking temperatures reported in several cities and
hotter-than-usual temperatures across the state. The National Weather
Service put the San
Francisco Bay area
and San
Diego
under a heat advisory and issued a hazardous weather outlook for the
Los
Angeles area.
The Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) cancelled outside
activities and sports for the better part of a week due to the
extreme heat, which was the second
time
this school year that LAUSD has had to cancel activities because of
high temperatures.
On
one day, downtown Los Angeles reached 92 degrees by
noon,
whereas the average October temperature for that city is 79 degrees.
Several cities in Southern California broke
record temperatures.
Oxnard reached 98 degrees, breaking an almost 70-year-old record.
Fire
As
wildfires continued to burn across parts of drought-stricken
California, a record-breaking
amount of fire retardant
was used (203,000 gallons in one day alone) while combatting a
massive wildfire in Northern California. The fire was burning so
hotly and expanding so explosively, due to the prolonged drought,
that firefighters found that normal amounts of retardant weren't
stopping the flames.
It
is now well known that fire season in California, as well as across
all the other Western US states, is extending due to ACD.
Denial
and Reality
The
person who runs the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a
free-market lobbying group that opposes policies to mitigate ACD, is
not sure whether humans actually cause ACD, according to an interview
recently published in National
Journal.
When
asked specifically whether or not she thought human carbon emissions
are causing climate change, ALEC CEO Lisa Nelson said, "I don’t
know the science on that."
The
denial-based antics of Gov. Chris Christie are ongoing as well. He
recently
said
that a regional cap-and-trade program from which his state of New
Jersey withdrew in 2011 was "a completely useless plan" and
added that he "would not think of rejoining it."
Louisiana's
Gov. Bobby Jindal, a potential Republican presidential candidate for
2016, is taking a "soft denial" approach by admitting
that ACD is real, while saying the extent to which humans have a role
is still in "doubt."
The
denial project's success is evidenced by large numbers of Americans
racing
to buy and develop seashore properties
in areas well known to be at high-risk for rising seas and
increasingly intense storms. Mike Huckabee, now apparently a chronic
presidential candidate, is among those racing to build on shores that
will be submerged in the not-so-distant future.
It's
no coincidence that merely 3 percent of current Congressional
Republicans have even gone on record to accept the fact that climate
disruption is anthropogenic, according
to PolitiFact,
which also found that there is a grand total of eight Republican
non-deniers, total, in the House and Senate.
Another
interesting turn of events shows companies like GE and Google
operating as large companies do in advance of elections - funding
both sides to safeguard their interests. In this case, these
companies, along with others, are making
campaign contributions
to Congressional ACD-deniers - while simultaneously professing to be
pro-sustainability companies.
Meanwhile
the media blitz continues, as the Rupert Murdoch-owned and
ACD-denying Wall Street Journal recently ran an article titled
"Climate
Science Is Not Settled,"
which was chock full of the usual ACD-denier talking points. The
article provides us with a prime example of how the doubt narrative
is consistently slipped in as a meme: "Any serious discussion of
the changing climate must begin by acknowledging not only the
scientific certainties but also the uncertainties, especially in
projecting the future."
In
stark contrast to the "doubters" and "deniers,"
the Pentagon recently
announced
that ACD poses an "immediate risk" to national security,
according to the Department of Defense's 2014 Climate Change
Adaptation Roadmap.
Shaun
Donovan, the new US director of the Office of Management and Budget,
used his first speech to talk about the dangers of inaction on
climate change, in regards to the federal budget. "From where I
sit, climate action is a must do; climate inaction is a can't do; and
climate denial scores - and I don't mean scoring points on the
board," he said.
"I mean that it scores in the budget. Climate denial will cost
us billions of dollars."
Google
CEO Eric Schmidt recently admitted that funding ALEC was a "mistake,"
and said that the group's spreading of disinformation and lies about
ACD was "making the world a much worse place." During an
NPR interview, Schmidt said, "Everyone understands climate
change is occurring and the people who oppose it are really hurting
our children and our grandchildren. . . . And so we should not be
aligned with such people - they're just, they're just literally
lying."
The
Endangered Species Coalition recently
released a list
of things people should take their children to go see outdoors,
because if they wait too long, their kids might not get a chance to
see them before they become extinct. The list includes monarch
butterflies, polar bears, great white sharks, white bark pine trees
and Snake River sockeye salmon.
A
study
published
in Environmental Research Letters showed that switching to natural
gas will not reduce carbon emissions very much, and could in fact
increase them slightly, due to the fact that it would discourage the
use of carbon-free renewable energy sources. This is significant
because there are many lawmakers who are ACD "realists,"
including President Obama, who advocate that natural gas is a
"solution" to ACD.
A
remarkable
electronic dashboard
created by The Guardian shows some of the key indicators of planetary
health, where you can view updated snapshots of the impacts your
country, as well as humans, are having on the environment.
Lastly,
possibly the most disturbing reality check of all comes from MIT's
2014 Climate and Energy Outlook. The recently
released report
revealed that global energy use and carbon dioxide emissions will
likely double by 2100.
See
the NOAA National Climate Data Center’s report HERE
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