Species
Are Dying Off, Human Disease Is On the Rise and Doomsday Is Closer
Than Ever
Dahr Jamail
3 February, 2015
This
post first appeared at Truthout.org.
I'm
graced to live adjacent to Olympic National Park and have it as my
backyard sanctuary.
Recently,
I hiked up to an alpine lake at 5,000 feet, where my friend John and
I pitched camp and settled in to climb a nearby peak. The clear,
rarified air wafting through sub-alpine fir expands the soul, not to
mention the power of the incredible mountain views.
But
the trip, fantastic weather and summit aside, had a bittersweet edge
to it.
We
are at high latitude in upper Washington State, relative to the rest
of the contiguous 48 states. The trip was in late January, and on the
climb we were well over one mile above sea level, but we never saw
the temperature drop below freezing, even at night. Large areas of
our route up the peak found us slogging up scree slopes bare of snow,
when normally the basin we were in would have required the use of
avalanche transceivers and other precautions for traveling in heavy
snow on steep slopes.
I
brought my snow shovel, but it never left my pack as we pitched our
tent on terra firma, on the banks of a formerly frozen alpine lake
that was melting out. "These plants are budding, I can't believe
it," John, who has lived in the area for more than 25 years,
told me from nearby our tent. "These are spring conditions, but
it's January!"
After
our climb, we hiked back down toward the trailhead. The trail, just
below our campsite at the lake, wound past thick, old-growth cedar
trees with orange trail markers placed 10 feet up the trees in order
to be visible to skiers amid deep snows. These days, we hiked up bare
ground, and had to look up to see the trail markers.
The
signs of anthropogenic climate disruption (ACD) are all around us
now, evident to anyone willing to see them.
This
month's dispatch was a difficult one to write, given the
preponderance of earth-shaking reports about how far along we truly
are in this anthropogenic climate catastrophe.
But
don't just take my word for it, dear reader.
2014
is officially in the books as the hottest
year on record,
and all 10 of the hottest years have occurred since 1998.
National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) data also revealed that
the 2010s decade is on pace to become the hottest on record, which
means it would surpass the 2000s as the previous hottest, which
surpassed the 1990s as the same, which surpassed the 1980s.
The
trend is clear.
What's
more, 2015 began with atmospheric carbon dioxide levels already
above the 400 parts per million level,
which is a troubling sign, given that annual levels tend to peak in
May.
With
experts calling our current time period the sixth great mass
extinction event in earth's history, we have been warned to expect
between 30 to 50 percent of all current species to go extinct by 2050
due primarily to ACD. A recent
report listed
several key species we must expect to see go extinct in 2015,
including the Amur leopard, Sumatran elephant, Javan rhinoceros,
leatherback turtle and mountain gorilla.
A
stunning new
study published in the prestigious journal Science concluded
that we are on the verge of causing "a major extinction event"
in the oceans, and one of the scientists who authored the study
stated frankly, "I honestly feel there's not much hope for
normal ecosystems in the ocean" without a dramatic shift away
from the current business-as-usual fossil-fueled economy.
Additionally, another
recent study found
that sea levels are now rising 25 percent faster than previous
estimates, and the acceleration witnessed in the 1990s is even more
dramatic than previously calculated.
To
make matters worse, another major study
published in Science recently
found that human activity has already pushed the planet beyond four
of its nine "planetary boundaries." The conclusion of the
study said that at the rate things are progressing, the coming
decades will see the earth no longer as a "safe operating space"
for human beings, let alone most other species. The four boundaries
we've already crossed are the extinction rate, deforestation,
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, and the flow of nitrogen and
phosphorous (land fertilizers) into the oceans.
This
is precisely why climate scientists have recently begun begging
their respective governments to
leave the rest of the planetary fossil fuels in the ground.
All
of these terrifying developments, along with the others this series
has covered over the last year, have led members of the Bulletin
of the Atomic Scientists to recently move the
hands of the Doomsday clock to three minutes to midnight. This is two
minutes closer to planetary catastrophe than we were in 2014, and
closer than we have been since the height of the Cold War.
Earth
ACD's
impacts across the planet's landmasses are becoming much more
pronounced.
In
January, a report published in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences showed that California
has lost half of all its large trees since
the 1930s, and ACD is seen as a major factor.
Up
in the Arctic, the region of the planet that continues to see the
most pronounced changes, a little bird known as the dovekie (auk) has
become a sentinel
of ACD,
due to the fact that shrinking sea ice is having a profound impact on
its feeding habits, adult birds are losing body mass and their future
survival rates look precarious.
There
are other ways birds, as well as fish and mammals, serve as warning
sentinels: Among many different species, mass die-offs, sometimes in
the hundreds of thousands, are now increasing in both frequency and
in the numbers of dead, according to a recent
study.
In
Borneo, half of the mammals there will see their habitats shrink by
at least one-third by 2080, recent
research shows.
Conservationists warn that by then twice as many mammals will be at
risk of extinction, due to ACD, loss of rainforest and hunting.
Another report in
January showed that conditions across the Himalayas, which, in 2014,
found 43 people killed during unseasonable snow storms on summer
trekking routes and the single worst disaster ever for Sherpas on
Mount Everest when a collapsing hanging glacier killed 16, are
continuing to warm due to ACD.
Also
in that region of the world, mountain communities in Pakistan are
now facing
more natural hazards than
ever before, due to warmer temperatures and increasing rainfall.
Similarly in
Kathmandu, Nepal, hotter temperatures are
crippling the supply of power and food to the capital of what is
already the poorest country in Asia, after Afghanistan.
In
the United States, tens of millions of acres of mountaintop forests
spanning the Southwest are now in danger of being scorched out of
existence by ACD (due to lack of moisture and increasing
temperatures), according to a recent
report.
Another
report shows
that ACD is likely to have a dramatic effect on agriculture in the
Midwest, where farmers are facing myriad impacts of weather-related
challenges as temperatures continue to increase. Seasonal variations,
increasing temperature fluctuations and drought are some of the key
impacts, among many others.
A
report commissioned by the National
Academy of Sciences warned
that the US agricultural livestock field must undergo massive
systemic changes if it has a hope of coping with food security and
sustainability issues stemming directly from ACD. The authors of the
report said that in order to meet rising demand from an
ever-increasing global population, animal scientists must develop
more sustainable production methods while simultaneously coping with
ACD's effects on crop yields and animal well-being.
Human
health impacts continue to manifest as well.
A recent
survey of
members of the American Thoracic Society, which represents 15,000
physicians and medical professionals involved in respiratory and
critical care medicine, found that they are already seeing dramatic
health effects in their patients that they believe are linked to ACD.
An overwhelming 89 percent of the health-care professionals agreed
that ACD is occurring, 65 percent of them said ACD was relevant to
patient care, and 77 percent said they have already seen an increase
in chronic diseases related to air pollution.
A report published
in the National Academy of Sciences by a University of
Missouri-Columbia researcher warned that ACD might give you
intestinal worms: Rising sea levels around coastal river deltas could
lead to increased prevalence of flukes that can cause infections and
internal organ inflammation if ingested by humans.
Another
recent report, this one from the Yale
Project on Climate Change Communication,
listed seven ways ACD can kill you, from deadly bug bites, to
respiratory and asthma problems, to lack of water.
Furthermore,
the World
Health Organization already estimates that
ACD will cause at least an additional 250,000 deaths per year around
the globe between 2030 and 2050.
Experts
also have warned governments to
plan for ACD migrants, citing evidence that ACD and natural disasters
already force three to 10 times more people from their homes than all
of the conflicts and wars in the world, combined.
Water
As
usual, the amplification of ACD is most apparent while looking
through the water lens.
A
recent study published
in Nature Climate Change showed
that extreme weather arising from La Niña events in the Pacific
Ocean will "double," and parts of the world will have their
weather patterns switch between extremes of wet and dry, according to
scientists.
The
Atlantic Salmon Trust released a report
showing that
wild Atlantic salmon are now in danger of extinction, due to farming
and ACD.
A study
published in Geophysical Research Letters shows
that the fate of the Galapagos Islands' coral reefs - most of the
reefs surrounding the islands have died out since the 1980s - is
likely a preview for coral reefs around the world: The study warned
that nearly all reefs could face the same fate by 2050.
Anomalies
regarding marine life continue as well. Southern California saw its
rare marine life reach
record numbers in
2014, due to increasing ocean temperatures spurred on by ACD. Rare
sightings of false killer whales, pilot whales and sperm whales are
becoming more common.
The
US East Coast is already facing
dire consequences of ACD,
as Baltimore, Boston, Annapolis and other cities are seeing their
land sink beneath rising seas, their fishing industries suffer and
their barrier islands disappear.
The NOAA
warned recently that
US coastal cities will face daily flooding by 2050, again due to ACD.
Thus, it comes as no surprise that massive cities like Miami are only
treading water for now. Their adaptation measures are only postponing
the inevitable and show the folly of battling nature, according to
a recent
report.
In
Pakistan, coastal villagers are already retreating
further inland due to rising seas,
as land erosion is causing fishermen to say things like "the
seawater stole our homes."
News
on the sea level front is certainly not expected to get any better.
NASA's
chief scientist Ellen Stofan, during
a lecture at the University College of London at
the end of 2014, projected a two-meter sea level rise by 2100 due to
increasingly rapid melting of the Western Antarctic ice shelf.
Stofan
has thus doubled the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's
(IPCC) worst-case prediction.
Even
the tourist and adventure businesses are being kept on their toes by
ACD.
In
New Zealand, where the glaciers are retreating dramatically (as they
are in most other regions around the planet), tour
operators are having a tough time keeping
up with the changes in a way that keeps their businesses sustainable.
Adventurers
on Kilimanjaro in Africa are having a similar experience. Ice climber
Will Gadd, who aimed to climb atop the world's highest glaciers, did
not know he would end up racing
against time and ACDto
do so. "We were climbing ice that isn't going to be there next
week," he said of his climbs.
California
once again stands out in terms of ACD impact because of its ongoing
drought. State and federal water officials gathered in January
to sound
the alarm about
California's fourth straight year of drought. Officials said that
dramatic action will be needed to deal with what is to come as
worsening drought and increased wildfires are expected this year, as
well as in following years.
According
to the National Drought Mitigation Center, the current state of
drought in California is unlike anything ever seen there before.
These graphs
tell the story of
how, for example, San Francisco usually averages four and half inches
of rain in January, its wettest month of the year. But in January
2015, that city received exactly zero. And the closest it had come to
that amount was in January 2014, when it received just 0.06 inches.
Looking
south, Brazil's most populated region is currently experiencing
its worst
drought in eight decades.
The
blatant harm humans have wrought upon the oceans of the world has
become quite obvious, with increasing acidification, massive plankton
and fish die-offs, melting Arctic ice, and dead zones - but now the
harm we have done to the oceans is even becoming visible
on land.
For example, in Thailand, where the coastal mangrove swamps have been
destroyed and overrun by increasingly powerful storms, storm surges
are rushing into and destroying that country's industrial areas,
causing billions of dollars in damage.
At
the poles, the dramatic impacts of ACD continue to make themselves
glaringly apparent.
In
January, NASA
released a video showing
how ACD is causing the Arctic ice sheet to progressively lose its
mature, thicker ice, despite some growth during some years. Thus, the
perennial Arctic sea ice continues to shrink its way out of
existence.
Researchers
with Britain's University of Leeds recently
showed that an Arctic ice cap in Norway's Svalbard island chain is
quite literally sliding into the sea. Since only 2012, a portion of
the ice cap that covered the island has thinned by 160 feet,
according to satellite measurements. One of the researchers described
the phenomenon as "a very large signal."
Given
the disconcerting news, NASA's chief scientist reported recently
about the Western Antarctic ice sheet. It is particularly alarming to
note that even the largest glacier in East Antarctica, the Totten
Glacier, is being melted
by warming oceans.
The Totten's annual output now releases enough water over two and a
half days to fill Australia's Sydney Harbor - and its pace is only
increasing.
Fire
Some
of the worst wildfires in the Southern Hemisphere continue to be in
Australia, which at the time of this writing was battling its worst
fires in more than 30 years.
Climate scientists have long
since found that
ACD is increasing wildfires' frequency, season length and intensity.
More
bad news for that country comes from its national science agency as
well as its Bureau of Meteorology, which recently released their
projections based on 40-year global climate models. The projections
show that
ACD will impact Australia more intensely than the rest of the world,
and that the country is most likely on track for a temperature rise
of more than 5 degrees Celsius by 2100.
As
wildfires in California continue to increase in frequency and
intensity amid that state's ongoing drought, continued discussion and
public education efforts, which bring in climate scientists to speak
with the public there, are becoming
more common.
Air
The
changing jet stream continues to be the biggest story on the
atmospheric front. In early January, commercial jets traveling from
New York to London made the trip at nearly supersonic speeds due
to a jet stream roaring
at more than 200 miles per hour. A flight that typically takes more
than six hours took five hours and 20 minutes.
Meanwhile,
it comes as no surprise to see high temperature records continuing to
be set around the globe, including Alaska, where 2014 was the warmest
year on record for the state.
It was also the warmest year for the Bering Sea, Anchorage's warmest
year since 1926, and incredibly, the first time in recorded history
that the temperature in Anchorage never dropped below zero for an
entire calendar year.
In
nearby Canada, researchers
are now warning that
warmer temperatures pose a threat to the quintessential Canadian
experience of outdoor ice rinks.
In
the Arctic, the Yamal Peninsula in Siberia has gotten much attention
during recent months due to several
massive holes in
the ground that appeared, which scientists have linked to methane
releases. In the same area, methane releases are on the rise,
according to recent reports in the Journal
of Geophysical Research, Geophysical
Research Letters and Truthout.
Methane
is a far more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide,
and scientists
warn that
increased methane emissions already in the atmosphere could warm the
planet between 4 and 6 degrees Celsius by 2100.
Denial
and Reality
As
usual, the denial section of this month's climate dispatch contains a
healthy dose of delusion. Also as usual, this denial is emanating
from the bowels of the US Congress, where a full 53
percent of
the latest iteration of said Congress denies the reality of ACD. In
the Senate the situation is even worse, where 72
percent of
the members refuse to acknowledge climate reality. In fact, only
eight US states do not have a member of their congressional
delegation who is in ACD denial . . . Just in case we needed another
reason to loath the US House of so-called Representatives.
The
last time an anti-science caucus in Congress was this strong was
probably during the Scopes "monkey trial," 90 years ago,
and most of these current congressional monkeys are guaranteed
chronic re-election and jobs for life.
In
said Congress, there are also five members who - incredibly - do
accept the science of ACD, but on important policy votes like the
Keystone XL pipeline, are still going to vote with their ACD-denying
colleagues. These five are Rep. Chris Gibson (R-New York), Rep.
Garret Graves (R-Louisiana), Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Illinois), Sen.
Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina), and Sen. Lisa Murkowski
(R-Alaska).
These
five are proof that knowledge without action is useless. The same can
be said for morality.
But
thankfully there are some climate scientists that have taken it upon
themselves to speak truth to power.
Consider
the recent letter penned by climate scientist Michael Mann for the
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, where he succinctly describes the
concerted effort by the fossil fuel industry to take down key ACD
scientists.
In
"The
Serengeti Strategy: How Special Interests Try to Intimidate
Scientists, and How Best to Fight Back,"
Mann wrote: "It is difficult to take on an entire group of
scientists at once. But bringing down individuals is easier, and it
serves the larger effort of dismissing, obscuring, and
misrepresenting well-established science and its implications.
"By
singling out a sole scientist, it is possible for the forces of
'anti-science' to bring many more resources to bear on one
individual, exerting enormous pressure from multiple directions at
once, making defense difficult," he added. "It is similar
to what happens when a group of lions on the Serengeti seek out a
vulnerable individual zebra at the edge of a herd."
A
recent, brilliant op-ed
by Naomi Oreskes,
co-author of the book Merchants
of Doubt,
which exposes the fossil fuel anti-science lobby industry, makes
clear how scientists themselves are practicing a form of self-denial
by disallowing themselves the right to believe anything that has not
passed an exceedingly high bar of standards.
On
a more cheerful note, coverage of ACD in the news appears to be
improving, as a study released by The
Daily Climate showed coverage
returning to its 2009 peak.
In
Davos, Switzerland, the president of the World Bank urged
the international community to
assist developing countries in coping with a warming planet, as the
World Economic Forum went on to become dominated by calls to make
this year one of action on ACD.
On
the mitigation front, the "electric highway" in Washington
and Oregon, which has one of the largest and most useful
concentrations of fast-charging stations, is now
serving thousands of electric car drivers,
and the numbers are increasing rapidly.
The
global fossil
fuel divestment movement continues apace,
as roughly 300 professors at Stanford University, including Nobel
laureates, have called on that university to jettison all of its
fossil fuel investments.
Pope
Francis, head of the 1.2-billion strong Catholic Church, has
continued his
global calls for action toward mitigating ACD. Making ACD his top
priority for 2015, the pope's unprecedented moves have been at odds
with the conservative roots of the church. Nevertheless, in a major
document called an "encyclical," which will be published in
March, with a message that will be spread to congregations around the
globe by the Catholic clergy, the pope is rumored to focus on the
fact that it is the world's poorest 3 billion people who will suffer
disproportionate harm from runaway ACD.
The
encyclical is also
likely to address the
fact that by contrast, it is the world's richest 1 billion people who
are responsible for between 50 to 70 percent of the greenhouse gases
that are to blame.
All
good news, yes.
However,
we were reminded recently of the karma we have sown and will
assuredly reap by a recent
paper in
the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Forensic
Engineers. The paper reports that the United States has caused more
ACD than any other country, and the planet is set to take its revenge
by way of the rapidly melting West Antarctic ice sheet. In 2014, NASA
revealed how
we have irrevocably destabilized that ice sheet, which will
eventually add 11 feet of sea level rise.
According
to the paper, when West Antarctica collapses completely, a process
that is already well underway, the United States will bear the brunt
of the 11-foot sea level rise input, possibly more than 14 feet of
it, due to Newton's
law of universal gravitation.
A
reality check for the deniers, indeed.
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