Mass
Extinction: It's the End of the World as We Know It
The
idea of possible human extinction is now beginning to occasionally
find its way into mainstream consciousness.
By
Dahr Jamail / Truthout
14
July, 2015
Guy
McPherson is a professor emeritus of evolutionary biology, natural
resources and ecology at the University of Arizona, and has been a
climate change expert for 30 years. He has also become a
controversial figure, due to the fact that he does not shy away from
talking about the possibility of near-term human extinction.
While
McPherson's perspective might sound like the stuff of science
fiction, there is historical precedent for his predictions.
Fifty-five million years ago, a 5-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 during any other
moment in the last 65 million years.
McPherson
fears that we are well along in the process of causing our own
extinction.
Prior
to that, the Permian mass extinction that occurred 250 million years
ago, also known as the "Great Dying," was triggered by a
massive lava flow in an area of Siberia that led to an increase in
global temperatures of 6 degrees Celsius.
That, in turn, caused the
melting of frozen methane deposits under the seas.
Released into the
atmosphere, those gases caused temperatures to skyrocket further. All
of this occurred over a period of approximately 80,000 years. The
change in climate is 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 percent of all species were wiped out.
Today's
current scientific and observable evidence strongly
suggests we
are in the midst of the same process - only this time it is
anthropogenic, and happening exponentially faster than even the
Permian mass extinction did.
In
fact, a recently published
study in
Science Advances states, unequivocally, that the planet has
officially entered its sixth mass extinction event. The study shows
that species are already being killed off at rates much faster than
they were during the other five extinction events, and warns
ominously that humans could very likely be among the first wave of
species to go extinct.
So
if some feel that McPherson's thinking is extreme, when the myriad
scientific reports he cites to back his claims are looked at squarely
and the dots are connected, the perceived extremism begins to
dissolve into a possible, or even likely, reality.
The
idea of possible human extinction, coming not just from McPherson but
a growing number of scientists (as well as the aforementioned
recently published report in Science), is now beginning to
occasionally find its way into mainstream consciousness.
"A
Child Born Today May Live to See Humanity's End, Unless ..."
reads a recent blog
post title from Reuters.
It reads:
Humans
will be extinct in 100 years because
the planet will be uninhabitable, according to Australian
microbiologist Frank Fenner, one of the leaders of the effort to
eradicate smallpox in the 1970s. He blames overcrowding, denuded
resources and climate change. Fenner's prediction is not a sure bet,
but he is correct that there is no way emissions reductions will be
enough to save us from our trend toward doom. And there doesn't seem
to be any big global rush to reduce emissions, anyway.
McPherson,
who maintains the blog "Nature
Bats Last," told Truthout, "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."
Truthout
first interviewed McPherson in early 2014, at which time he had
identified 24 self-reinforcing positive feedback loops triggered by
human-caused climate disruption. Today that number has grown to more
than 50, and continues to increase.
A
self-reinforcing positive feedback loop is akin to a "vicious
circle": It accelerates the impacts of anthropogenic climate
disruption (ACD). An example would be methane releases in the Arctic.
Massive amounts of methane are currently locked in the permafrost,
which is now melting rapidly. As the permafrost melts, methane - a
greenhouse gas 100 times more potent than carbon dioxide on a short
timescale - is released into the atmosphere, warming it further,
which in turn causes more permafrost to melt, and so on.
As
soon as this summer, we are likely to begin seeing periods of an
ice-free Arctic. (Those periods will arrive by the summer
of 2016 at
the latest, according to a Naval Postgraduate School report.)
Once
the summer ice begins melting away completely, even for short
periods, methane releases will worsen dramatically.
Is
it 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?
McPherson,
like the scientists involved in the recent study that confirms the
arrival of the sixth great extinction, fears that the situation is
already so serious and so many self-reinforcing feedback loops are
already in play that we are well along in the process of causing our
own extinction.
Furthermore,
McPherson remains convinced that it could happen far more quickly
than generally believed possible - in the course of just the next few
decades, or even sooner.
Truthout
caught up with McPherson in Washington State, where he was recently
on a lecture tour, sharing his dire analysis of how far along we
already are regarding ACD.
Dahr
Jamail: How many positive feedback loops have you identified up until
now, and what does this ever-increasing number of them indicate?
Guy
McPherson: I
can't quite wrap my mind around the ever-increasing number of
self-reinforcing feedback loops. A long time ago, when there were
about 20 of them, I believed evidence would accumulate in support of
existing loops, but we couldn't possibly identify any more. Ditto for
when we hit 30. And 40. There are more than 50 now, and the hits keep
coming. And the evidence for existing feedback loops continues to row.
In
addition to these positive feedback loops "feeding" within
themselves, they also interact among each other. Methane released
from the Arctic Ocean is exacerbated and contributes to reduced
albedo [reflectivity of solar radiation by the ice] as the Arctic ice
declines. Tack on the methane released from permafrost and it's
obvious we're facing a shaky future for humanity.
You
talk often about how when major industrial economic systems collapse,
this will actually cause a temperature spike. Please explain, in
layperson's terms, how this occurs.
Industrial
activity continually adds reflective particles into earth's
atmosphere. Particularly well known are sulfates produced by burning
coal ("clean coal" has a lower concentration of sulfates
than "dirty coal"). These particles reflect incoming
sunlight, thus artificially cooling the planet.
These
reflective particles constantly fall out of the atmosphere, but
industrial activity continuously adds them, too. When industrial
activity ceases, all the particles will fall out within a few days.
As a result, earth will lose its "umbrella" and rapid
warming of the planet will ensue. According to a 2011 paper by James
Hansen and colleagues, the warming will add 1.2 plus or minus 0.2
degrees Celsius. Subsequent research indicates the conservative
nature of this paper, suggesting termination of industrial activity
will add a minimum of 1.4 degrees Celsius to the global average
temperature.
What
indicators are you seeing that show the possibility of major economic
collapses in the near future?
We
cannot sustain the unsustainable forever, and this version of
civilization is the least sustainable of them all. It teeters on the
brink, and many conservative voices have predicted economic collapse
this year or next. According to a June
2012 reportby
David Korowicz for the Feasta group, a disruption of supply will
trigger collapse of the world's industrial economy in as little as
three weeks.
The
supply disruptions to which Korowicz refers include water, food and
oil. We can add financial credit to the list. In other words, credit
could dry up as it nearly did in late 2008. Or the bond markets could
trigger hyperinflation. California could have insufficient water to
grow enough food to support much of the US, and not long from now.
The list goes on.
Go
into detail about what you're seeing as far as indications of abrupt
climate change.
When
I'm in the midst of a speaking tour, as I am now, I deliver a
presentation approximately every day. Lately, I include a [different]
indication of abrupt climate change [in] each presentation. In other
words, I've been coming across evidence every day.
Recent
examples include the June 19, 2015, paper in Science
Advances:
We are in the midst of the sixth great extinction. According to the
abstract, the "sixth mass extinction is already under way."
The lead author, in an interview, said, "life would take many
millions of years to recover, and our species itself would likely
disappear early on."
According
to data from The Cryosphere Today, Arctic
ice extent declined 340,000 square kilometers between
June 17 and 18, 2015. Such an event is unprecedented. We could
witness an ice-free Arctic by September of this year for the first
time in human history.
How
much temperature increase, over what period of time?
Depending
upon the timing of economic collapse and release of the 50-gigaton
burst of methane Natalia
Shakhova warns about,
earth could warm an additional 3 degrees Celsius within 18 months.
The relatively slow rate of planetary warming we're seeing so far
exceeds the ability of organisms to adapt by a factor
of 10,000,
according to a paper in the August 2013 edition of Ecology Letters.
We
depend upon a living planet for our survival. We're killing non-human
species at an astonishing rate. To believe we're clever enough to
avoid extinction is pure hubris.
Is
there an historical precedent for this phenomenon?
There
is no historical precedent for ongoing planetary warming. We're
dumping carbon into the atmosphere at a rate faster than the Great
Dying from about 250 million years ago. That time, nearly all life on
earth was driven to extinction.
What
does this mean for humans? How do we cope and survive?
Astonishingly,
against cosmological odds, you and I get to live. But not forever.
And not much longer.
Coping
with the reality of abrupt climate change and human extinction is
hardly an easy undertaking. The message I've been delivering for
several years is a heavy burden. I suggest fully absorbing the
message that we get to live! Part of the process of living is death.
In
addition to my latest book [Extinction
Dialogs],
co-authored by Carolyn Baker, I've developed other means for dealing
with reality. Among these are a book for young adults co-authored by
Pauline Schneider and a workshop co-developed and facilitated by Ms.
Schneider. We signed a contract for the book in mid-June and the
workshop is described at onlyloveremains.org.
What
are some events of late you can point to as evidence that we are
already experiencing abrupt climate change?
In
addition to the information presented above, there's the ongoing
collapse of the Larsen ice shelves in Antarctica, abundant evidence
we're headed for a warmer year than 2014 (the hottest year in
history), and numerous extreme weather events. These ongoing
phenomena have been anticipated for years.
And
now, they're here.
What
are other factors you feel people should be aware of?
We're
in serious human-population overshoot. We're driving to extinction at
least 150 species each day. Nuclear power plants require grid-tied
electricity, cooling water and people getting paychecks. Without all
these, they melt down, thus immersing all life on earth in ionizing
radiation.
There's
more. Much more. But all the evidence points toward our individual
deaths and the extinction of our species in the near future.
But
most importantly, we get to live now.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.