The
information in this link is a veritable horror story of climate
change armageddon.
Possibly
the worst aspect is that it is now 3 years old and the situation has
spiraled well out of control where the methane hydrates in the Arctic
are now being released causing positive feedback loops that are
speeding up the time frame.
6
degrees C is now almost certainly baked in; BETWEEN FIVE AND SIX
DEGREES OF WARMING "
Although
warming on this scale lies within the IPCC’s officially endorsed
range of 21st-century possibilities, climate models have little to
say about what Lynas, echoing Dante, describes as “the Sixth Circle
of Hell”
Don't
say you weren't warned.
---Kevin
Hester
A
degree by degree explanation of what will happen when the earth warms
3
November, 2011
Even
if greenhouse emissions stopped overnight the concentrations already
in the atmosphere would still mean a global rise of between 0.5 and
1C. A shift of a single degree is barely perceptible to human skin,
but it’s not human skin we’re talking about. It’s the planet;
and an average increase of one degree across its entire surface means
huge changes in climatic extreme.
Six
thousand years ago, when the world was one degree warmer than it is
now, the American agricultural heartland around Nebraska was desert.
It suffered a short reprise during the dust- bowl years of the 1930s,
when the topsoil blew away and hundreds of thousands of refugees
trailed through the dust to an uncertain welcome further west. The
effect of one-degree warming, therefore, requires no great feat of
imagination.
“The
western United States once again could suffer perennial droughts, far
worse than the 1930s. Deserts will reappear particularly in Nebraska,
but also in eastern Montana, Wyoming and Arizona, northern Texas and
Oklahoma. As dust and sandstorms turn day into night across thousands
of miles of former prairie, farmsteads, roads and even entire towns
will be engulfed by sand.”
What’s
bad for America will be worse for poorer countries closer to the
equator. It has been calculated that a one-degree increase would
eliminate fresh water from a third of the world’s land surface by
2100. Again we have seen what this means. There was an incident in
the summer of 2005: One tributary fell so low that miles of exposed
riverbank dried out into sand dunes, with winds whipping up thick
sandstorms. As desperate villagers looked out onto baking mud instead
of flowing water, the army was drafted in to ferry precious drinking
water up the river – by helicopter, since most of the river was too
low to be navigable by boat. The river in question was not some
small, insignificant trickle in Sussex. It was the Amazon.
While
tropical lands teeter on the brink, the Arctic already may have
passed the point of no return. Warming near the pole is much faster
than the global average, with the result that Arctic icecaps and
glaciers have lost 400 cubic kilometres of ice in 40 years.
Permafrost – ground that has lain frozen for thousands of years –
is dissolving into mud and lakes, destabilising whole areas as the
ground collapses beneath buildings, roads and pipelines. As polar
bears and Inuits are being pushed off the top of the planet, previous
predictions are starting to look optimistic. Earlier snowmelt means
more summer heat goes into the air and ground rather than into
melting snow, raising temperatures in a positive feedback effect.
More dark shrubs and forest on formerly bleak tundra means still more
heat is absorbed by vegetation.
Out
at sea the pace is even faster. Whilst snow-covered ice reflects more
than 80% of the sun’s heat, the darker ocean absorbs up to 95% of
solar radiation. Once sea ice begins to melt, in other words, the
process becomes self-reinforcing. More ocean surface is revealed,
absorbing solar heat, raising temperatures and making it unlikelier
that ice will re-form next winter. The disappearance of 720,000
square kilometres of supposedly permanent ice in a single year
testifies to the rapidity of planetary change. If you have ever
wondered what it will feel like when the Earth crosses a tipping
point, savour the moment.
Mountains,
too, are starting to come apart. In the Alps, most ground above 3,000
metres is stabilised by permafrost. In the summer of 2003, however,
the melt zone climbed right up to 4,600 metres, higher than the
summit of the Matterhorn and nearly as high as Mont Blanc. With the
glue of millennia melting away, rocks showered down and 50 climbers
died. As temperatures go on edging upwards, it won’t just be
mountaineers who flee. Whole towns and villages will be at risk. Some
towns, like Pontresina in eastern Switzerland, have already begun
building bulwarks against landslides.
At
the opposite end of the scale, low-lying atoll countries such as the
Maldives will be preparing for extinction as sea levels rise, and
mainland coasts – in particular the eastern US and Gulf of Mexico,
the Caribbean and Pacific islands and the Bay of Bengal – will be
hit by stronger and stronger hurricanes as the water warms. Hurricane
Katrina, which in 2005 hit New Orleans with the combined impacts of
earthquake and flood, was a nightmare precursor of what the future
holds.
Most
striking of all was seeing how people behaved once the veneer of
civilisation had been torn away. Most victims were poor and black,
left to fend for themselves as the police either joined in the
looting or deserted the area. Four days into the crisis, survivors
were packed into the city’s Superdome, living next to overflowing
toilets and rotting bodies as gangs of young men with guns seized the
only food and water available. Perhaps the most memorable scene was a
single military helicopter landing for just a few minutes, its crew
flinging food parcels and water bottles out onto the ground before
hurriedly taking off again as if from a war zone. In scenes more like
a Third World refugee camp than an American urban centre, young men
fought for the water as pregnant women and the elderly looked on with
nothing. Don’t blame them for behaving like this, I thought. It’s
what happens when people are desperate.
Chance
of avoiding one degree of global warming: zero.
BETWEEN
ONE AND TWO DEGREES OF WARMING
At
this level, expected within 40 years, the hot European summer of 2003
will be the annual norm. Anything that could be called a heatwave
thereafter will be of Saharan intensity. Even in average years,
people will die of heat stress.
The
first symptoms may be minor. A person will feel slightly nauseous,
dizzy and irritable. It needn’t be an emergency: an hour or so
lying down in a cooler area, sipping water, will cure it. But in
Paris, August 2003, there were no cooler areas, especially for
elderly people.
Once
body temperature reaches 41C (104F) its thermoregulatory system
begins to break down. Sweating ceases and breathing becomes shallow
and rapid. The pulse quickens, and the victim may lapse into a coma.
Unless drastic measures are taken to reduce the body’s core
temperature, the brain is starved of oxygen and vital organs begin to
fail. Death will be only minutes away unless the emergency services
can quickly get the victim into intensive are.
These
emergency services failed to save more than 10,000 French in the
summer of 2003. Mortuaries ran out of space as hundreds of dead
bodies were brought in each night. Across Europe as a whole, the
heatwave is believed to have cost between 22,000 and 35,000 lives.
Agriculture, too, was devastated. Farmers lost $12 billion worth of
crops, and Portugal alone suffered $12 billion of forest-fire damage.
The flows of the River Po in Italy, Rhine in Germany and Loire in
France all shrank to historic lows. Barges ran aground, and there was
not enough water for irrigation and hydroelectricity. Melt rates in
the Alps, where some glaciers lost 10% of their mass, were not just a
record – they doubled the previous record of 1998. According to the
Hadley centre, more than half the European summers by 2040 will be
hotter than this. Extreme summers will take a much heavier toll of
human life, with body counts likely to reach hundreds of thousands.
Crops will bake in the fields, and forests will die off and burn.
Even so, the short-term effects may not be the worst:
From
the beech forests of northern Europe to the evergreen oaks of the
Mediterranean, plant growth across the whole landmass in 2003 slowed
and then stopped. Instead of absorbing carbon dioxide, the stressed
plants began to emit it. Around half a billion tonnes of carbon was
added to the atmosphere from European plants, equivalent to a twelfth
of global emissions from fossil fuels. This is a positive feedback of
critical importance, because it suggests that, as temperatures rise,
carbon emissions from forests and soils will also rise. If these
land-based emissions are sustained over long periods, global warming
could spiral out of control.
In
the two-degree world, nobody will think of taking Mediterranean
holidays. The movement of people from northern Europe to the
Mediterranean is likely to reverse, switching eventually into a mass
scramble as Saharan heatwaves sweep across the Med. People everywhere
will think twice about moving to the coast. When temperatures were
last between 1 and 2C higher than they are now, 125,000 years ago,
sea levels were five or six metres higher too. All this “lost”
water is in the polar ice that is now melting. Forecasters predict
that the “tipping point” for Greenland won’t arrive until
average temperatures have risen by 2.7C.
The snag is that Greenland
is warming much faster than the rest of the world – 2.2 times the
global average. “Divide one figure by the other,” says Lynas,
“and the result should ring alarm bells across the world. Greenland
will tip into irreversible melt once global temperatures rise past a
mere 1.2C. The ensuing sea-level rise will be far more than the
half-metre that the IPCC has predicted for the end of the century.
Scientists point out that sea levels at the end of the last ice age
shot up by a metre every 20 years for four centuries, and that
Greenland’s ice, in the words of one glaciologist, is now thinning
like mad and flowing much faster than it ought to. Its biggest
outflow glacier, Jakobshavn Isbrae, has thinned by 15 metres every
year since 1997, and its speed of flow has doubled. At this rate the
whole Greenland ice sheet would vanish within 140 years. Miami would
disappear, as would most of Manhattan. Central London would be
flooded. Bangkok, Bombay and Shanghai would lose most of their area.
In all, half of humanity would have to move to higher ground.
Not
only coastal communities will suffer. As mountains lose their
glaciers, so people will lose their water supplies. The entire Indian
subcontinent will be fighting for survival. As the glaciers disappear
from all but the highest peaks, their runoff will cease to power the
massive rivers that deliver vital freshwater to hundreds of millions.
Water shortages and famine will be the result, destabilising the
entire region. And this time the epicentre of the disaster won’t be
India, Nepal or Bangladesh, but nuclear-armed Pakistan.
Everywhere,
ecosystems will unravel as species either migrate or fall out of
synch with each other. By the time global temperatures reach two
degrees of warming in 2050, more than a third of all living species
will face extinction.
Chance
of avoiding two degrees of global warming: 93%, but only if emissions
of greenhouse gases are reduced by 60% over the next 10 years.
BETWEEN
TWO AND THREE DEGREES OF WARMING
Up
to this point, assuming that governments have planned carefully and
farmers have converted to more appropriate crops, not too many people
outside subtropical Africa need have starved. Beyond two degrees,
however, preventing mass starvation will be as easy as halting the
cycles of the moon. First millions, then billions, of people will
face an increasingly tough battle to survivо.
To
find anything comparable we have to go back to the Pliocene – last
epoch of the Tertiary period, 3m years ago. There were no continental
glaciers in the northern hemisphere (trees grew in the Arctic), and
sea levels were 25 metres higher than today’s. In this kind of
heat, the death of the Amazon is as inevitable as the melting of
Greenland. The paper spelling it out is the very one whose
apocalyptic message so shocked in 2000. Scientists at the Hadley
centre feared that earlier climate models, which showed global
warming as a straightforward linear progression, were too simplistic
in their assumption that land and the oceans would remain inert as
their temperatures rose. Correctly as it would turn out, they
predicted positive feedback.
Warmer
seas absorb less carbon dioxide, leaving more to accumulate in the
atmosphere and intensify global warming. On land, matters would be
even worse. Huge amounts of carbon are stored in the soil, the
half-rotted remains of dead vegetation. The generally accepted
estimate is that the soil carbon reservoir contains some 1600
gigatonnes, more than double the entire carbon content of the
atmosphere. As soil warms, bacteria accelerate the breakdown of this
stored carbon, releasing it into the atmosphere.
The
end of the world is nigh. A three-degree increase in global
temperature – possible as early as 2050 – would throw the carbon
cycle into reverse. Instead of absorbing carbon dioxide, vegetation
and soils start to release it. So much carbon pours into the
atmosphere that it pumps up atmospheric concentrations by 250 parts
per million by 2100, boosting global warming by another 1.5C. In
other words, the Hadley team had discovered that carbon-cycle
feedbacks could tip the planet into runaway global warming by the
middle of this century – much earlier than anyone had expected.
Confirmation
came from the land itself. Climate models are routinely tested
against historical data. In this case, scientists checked 25 years’
worth of soil samples from 6,000 sites across the UK. The result was
another black joke. As temperatures gradually rose the scientists
found that huge amounts of carbon had been released naturally from
the soils. They totted it all up and discovered – irony of ironies
– that the 13m tonnes of carbon British soils were emitting
annually was enough to wipe out all the country’s efforts to comply
with the Kyoto Protocol. All soils will be affected by the rising
heat, but none as badly as the Amazon’s.
“Catastrophe” is
almost too small a word for the loss of the rainforest. Its 7m square
kilometres produce 10% of the world’s entire photosynthetic output
from plants. Drought and heat will cripple it; fire will finish it
off. In human terms, the effect on the planet will be like cutting
off oxygen during an asthma attack.
In
the US and Australia, people will curse the climate-denying
governments of Bush and Howard.
No matter what later administrations may do, it will not be enough to keep the mercury down. With new “super-hurricanes” growing from the warming sea, Houston could be destroyed by 2045, and Australia will be a death trap. Farming and food production will tip into irreversible decline. Salt water will creep up the stricken rivers, poisoning ground water. Higher temperatures mean greater evaporation, further drying out vegetation and soils, and causing huge losses from reservoirs. In state capitals, heat every year is likely to kill between 8,000 and 15,000 mainly elderly people.
No matter what later administrations may do, it will not be enough to keep the mercury down. With new “super-hurricanes” growing from the warming sea, Houston could be destroyed by 2045, and Australia will be a death trap. Farming and food production will tip into irreversible decline. Salt water will creep up the stricken rivers, poisoning ground water. Higher temperatures mean greater evaporation, further drying out vegetation and soils, and causing huge losses from reservoirs. In state capitals, heat every year is likely to kill between 8,000 and 15,000 mainly elderly people.
It
is all too easy to visualise what will happen in Africa. In Central
America, too, tens of millions will have little to put on their
tables. Even a moderate drought there in 2001 meant hundreds of
thousands had to rely on food aid. This won’t be an option when
world supplies are stretched to breaking point (grain yields decline
by 10% for every degree of heat above 30C, and at 40C they are zero).
Nobody need look to the US, which will have problems of its own. As
the mountains lose their snow, so cities and farms in the west will
lose their water and dried-out forests and grasslands will perish at
the first spark.
The
Indian subcontinent meanwhile will be choking on dust. All of human
history shows that, given the choice between starving in situ and
moving, people move. In the latter part of the century tens of
millions of Pakistani citizens may be facing this choice. Pakistan
may find itself joining the growing list of failed states, as civil
administration collapses and armed gangs seize what little food is
left.
As
the land burns, so the sea will go on rising. Even by the most
optimistic calculation, 80% of Arctic sea ice by now will be gone,
and the rest will soon follow. New York will flood; the catastrophe
that struck eastern England in 1953 will become an unremarkable
regular event; and the map of the Netherlands will be torn up by the
North Sea. Everywhere, starving people will be on the move – from
Central America into Mexico and the US, and from Africa into Europe,
where resurgent fascist parties will win votes by promising to keep
them out.
Chance
of avoiding three degrees of global warming: poor if the rise reaches
two degrees and triggers carbon-cycle feedbacks from soils and
plants.
BETWEEN THREE AND FOUR DEGREES OF WARMING
The
stream of refugees will now include those fleeing from coasts to
safer interiors – millions at a time when storms hit. Where they
persist, coastal cities will become fortified islands. The world
economy, too, will be threadbare. As direct losses, social
instability and insurance payouts cascade through the system, the
funds to support displaced people will be increasingly scarce. Sea
levels will be rampaging upwards – in this temperature range, both
poles are certain to melt, causing an eventual rise of 50 metres. I
am not suggesting it would be instantaneous. In fact it would take
centuries, and probably millennia, to melt all of the Antarctic’s
ice. But it could yield sea-level rises of a metre or so every 20
years – far beyond our capacity to adapt. Oxford would sit on one
of many coastlines in a UK reduced to an archipelago of tiny islands.
More
immediately, China is on a collision course with the planet. By 2030,
if its people are consuming at the same rate as Americans, they will
eat two-thirds of the entire global harvest and burn 100m barrels of
oil a day, or 125% of current world output. That prospect alone
contains all the ingredients of catastrophe. But it’s worse than
that: “By the latter third of the 21st century, if global
temperatures are more than three degrees higher than now, China’s
agricultural production will crash. It will face the task of feeding
1.5bn much richer people – 200m more than now – on two thirds of
current supplies.” For people throughout much of the world,
starvation will be a regular threat; but it will not be the only one.
The
summer will get longer still, as soaring temperatures reduce forests
to tinderwood and cities to boiling morgues. Temperatures in the Home
Counties could reach 45C – the sort of climate experienced today in
Marrakech. Droughts will put the south-east of England on the global
list of water-stressed areas, with farmers competing against cities
for dwindling supplies from rivers and reservoirs.
Air-conditioning will be mandatory for anyone wanting to stay cool. This in turn will put ever more stress on energy systems, which could pour more greenhouse gases into the air if coal and gas-fired power stations ramp up their output, hydroelectric sources dwindle and renewables fail to take up the slack. The abandonment of the Mediterranean will send even more people north to “overcrowded refuges in the Baltic, Scandinavia and the British Isles.
Britain
will have problems of its own. As flood plains are more regularly
inundated, a general retreat out of high risk areas is likely.
Millions of people will lose their lifetime investments in houses
that become uninsurable and therefore unsaleable? The
Lancashire/Humber corridor is expected to be among the worst affected
regions, as are the Thames Valley, eastern Devon and towns around the
already flood-prone Severn estuary like Monmouth and Bristol. The
entire English coast from the Isle of Wight to Middlesbrough is
classified as at ‘very high’ or ‘extreme’ risk, as is the
whole of Cardigan Bay in Wales.
One
of the most dangerous of all feedbacks will now be kicking in – the
runaway thaw of permafrost. Scientists believe at least 500 billion
tonnes of carbon are waiting to be released from the Arctic ice,
though none yet has put a figure on what it will add to global
warming. One degree? Two? Three? The pointers are ominous.
As
with Amazon collapse and the carbon-cycle feedback in the
three-degree worldstabilising global temperatures at four degrees
above current levels may not be possible. If we reach three degrees,
therefore, that leads inexorably to four degrees, which leads
inexorably to five?
Chance
of avoiding four degrees of global warming: poor if the rise reaches
three degrees and triggers a runaway thaw of permafrost.
BETWEEN
FOUR AND FIVE DEGREES OF WARMING
We are looking now at an entirely different planet. Ice sheets have vanished from both poles; rainforests have burnt up and turned to desert; the dry and lifeless Alps resemble the High Atlas; rising seas are scouring deep into continental interiors. One temptation may be to shift populations from dry areas to the newly thawed regions of the far north, in Canada and Siberia. Even here, though, summers may be too hot for crops to be grown away from the coasts; and there is no guarantee that northern governments will admit southern refugees. Lynas recalls James Lovelock’s suspicion that Siberia and Canada would be invaded by China and the US, each hammering another nail into humanity’s coffin. Any armed conflict, particularly involving nuclear weapons, would of course further increase the planetary surface area uninhabitable for humans.
When
temperatures were at a similar level 55m years ago, following a very
sudden burst of global warming in the early Eocene, alligators and
other subtropical species were living high in the Arctic. What had
caused the climate to flip? Suspicion rests on methane hydrate –
“an ice-like combination of methane and water that forms under the
intense cold and pressure of the deep sea”, and which escapes with
explosive force when tapped. Evidence of a submarine landslide off
Florida, and of huge volcanic eruptions under the North Atlantic,
raises the possibility of trapped methane – a greenhouse gas 20
times more potent than carbon dioxide – being released in a giant
belch that pushed global temperatures through the roof.
Summer
heatwaves scorched the vegetation out of continental Spain, leaving a
desert terrain which was heavily eroded by winter rainstorms. Palm
mangroves grew as far north as England and Belgium, and the Arctic
Ocean was so warm that Mediterranean algae thrived. In short, it was
a world much like the one we are heading into this century. Although
the total amount of carbon in the atmosphere during the
Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum, or PETM, as scientists call it, was
more than today’s, the rate of increase in the 21st century may be
30 times faster. It may well be the fastest increase the world has
ever seen – faster even than the episodes that caused catastrophic
mass extinctions.
Globalism
in the five-degree world will break down into something more like
parochialism. Customers will have nothing to buy because producers
will have nothing to sell. With no possibility of international aid,
migrants will have to force their way into the few remaining
habitable enclaves and fight for survival.
Where
no refuge is available, civil war and a collapse into racial or
communal conflict seems the likely outcome. Isolated survivalism,
however, may be as impracticable as dialling for room service. How
many of us could really trap or kill enough game to feed a family?
Even if large numbers of people did successfully manage to fan out
into the countryside, wildlife populations would quickly dwindle
under the pressure. Supporting a hunter-gatherer lifestyle takes 10
to 100 times the land per person that a settled agricultural
community needs. A large-scale resort to survivalism would turn into
a further disaster for biodiversity as hungry humans killed and ate
anything that moved. Including, perhaps, each other. Invaders do not
take kindly to residents denying them food. History suggests that if
a stockpile is discovered, the householder and his family may be
tortured and killed. Look for comparison to the experience of
present-day Somalia, Sudan or Burundi, where conflicts over scarce
land and food are at the root of lingering tribal wars and state
collapse.
Chance
of avoiding five degrees of global warming: negligible if the rise
reaches four degrees and releases trapped methane from the sea bed.
BETWEEN
FIVE AND SIX DEGREES OF WARMING
Although
warming on this scale lies within the IPCC’s officially endorsed
range of 21st-century possibilities, climate models have little to
say about what Lynas, echoing Dante, describes as “the Sixth Circle
of Hell”. To see the most recent climatic lookalike, we have to
turn the geological clock back between 144m and 65m years, to the
Cretaceous, which ended with the extinction of the dinosaurs. There
was an even closer fit at the end of the Permian, 251m years ago,
when global temperatures rose by – yes – six degrees, and 95% of
species were wiped out.
That
episode was the worst ever endured by life on Earth, the closest the
planet has come to ending up a dead and desolate rock in space.” On
land, the only winners were fungi that flourished on dying trees and
shrubs. At sea there were only losers. Warm water is a killer. Less
oxygen can dissolve, so conditions become stagnant and anoxic.
Oxygen-breathing water-dwellers – all the higher forms of life from
plankton to sharks – face suffocation. Warm water also expands, and
sea levels rose by 20 metres.” The resulting “super-hurricanes”
hitting the coasts would have triggered flash floods that no living
thing could have survived.
There
are aspects of the so-called “end-Permian extinction” that are
unlikely to recur – most importantly, the vast volcanic eruption in
Siberia that spread magma hundreds of metres thick over an area
bigger than western Europe and shot billions of tonnes of CO2 into
the atmosphere. That is small comfort, however, for beneath the
oceans, another monster stirred – the same that would bring a
devastating end to the Palaeocene nearly 200m years later, and that
still lies in wait today.
Methane
hydrate.
What
happens when warming water releases pent-up gas from the sea bed:
First, a small disturbance drives a gas-saturated parcel of water
upwards. As it rises, bubbles begin to appear, as dissolved gas
fizzles out with reducing pressure – just as a bottle of lemonade
overflows if the top is taken off too quickly. These bubbles make the
parcel of water still more buoyant, accelerating its rise through the
water. As it surges upwards, reaching explosive force, it drags
surrounding water up with it. At the surface, water is shot hundreds
of metres into the air as the released gas blasts into the
atmosphere. Shockwaves propagate outwards in all directions,
triggering more eruptions nearby.
The
eruption is more than just another positive feedback in the
quickening process of global warming. Unlike CO2, methane is
flammable. Even in air-methane concentrations as low as 5%, the
mixture could ignite from lightning or some other spark and send
fireballs tearing across the sky. The effect would be much like that
of the fuel-air explosives used by the US and Russian armies –
so-called “vacuum bombs” that ignite fuel droplets above a
target. According to the CIA, those near the ignition point are
obliterated. Those at the fringes are likely to suffer many internal
injuries, including burst eardrums, severe concussion, ruptured lungs
and internal organs, and possibly blindness.” Such tactical
weapons, however, are squibs when set against methane-air clouds from
oceanic eruptions. Scientists calculate that they could “destroy
terrestrial life almost entirely (251m years ago, only one large land
animal, the pig-like lystrosaurus, survived). It has been estimated
that a large eruption in future could release energy equivalent to
108 megatonnes of TNT – 100,000 times more than the world’s
entire stockpile of nuclear weapons. Not even Lynas, for all his
scientific propriety, can avoid the Hollywood ending. “It is not
too difficult to imagine the ultimate nightmare, with oceanic methane
eruptions near large population centres wiping out billions of people
– perhaps in days. Imagine a ‘fuel-air explosive’ fireball
racing towards a city – London, say, or Tokyo – the blast wave
spreading out from the explosive centre with the speed and force of
an atomic bomb. Buildings are flattened, people are incinerated where
they stand, or left blind and deaf by the force of the explosion. Mix
Hiroshima with post-Katrina New Orleans to get some idea of what such
a catastrophe might look like: burnt survivors battling over food,
wandering far and wide from empty cities.
Then
would come hydrogen sulphide from the stagnant oceans. “It would be
a silent killer: imagine the scene at Bhopal following the Union
Carbide gas release in 1984, replayed first at coastal settlements,
then continental interiors across the world. At the same time, as the
ozone layer came under assault, we would feel the sun’s rays
burning into our skin, and the first cell mutations would be
triggering outbreaks of cancer among anyone who survived. Dante’s
hell was a place of judgment, where humanity was for ever punished
for its sins. With all the remaining forests burning, and the corpses
of people, livestock and wildlife piling up in every continent, the
six-degree world would be a harsh penalty indeed for the mundane
crime of burning fossil energy.
See also - http://globalwarming.berrens.nl/globalwarming.htm
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