The something that means absolutely nothing.
Amid melting Arctic ice, Kerry sees looming climate catastrophe
18
June, 2016
Standing
near Greenland's Jakobshavn glacier, the reputed source of the
iceberg that sank the Titanic over a century ago, U.S Secretary of
State John Kerry saw evidence of another looming catastrophe.
Giant
icebergs broken off from the glacier seemed to groan as they drifted
behind him, signaling eventual rising oceans that scientists warn
will submerge islands and populated coastal region.
Briefed
by researchers aboard a Royal Danish Navy patrol ship, Kerry appeared
stunned by how fast the ice sheets are melting. He was struck by the
more dire warnings he heard about the same process underway in more
remote Antarctica.
"This
has been a significant eye-opener for me and I've spent 25 years or
more engaged in this issue," Kerry said on the deck of the ship
with Danish Foreign Minister Kristian Jensen during a two-day visit
that ended late on Friday.
Kerry
made his first visit to this part of the Arctic to witness the
effects of climate changes and press the need to implement the Paris
climate accord. He has called it "the world's most fearsome
weapon of mass destruction".
The
United States chairs the Arctic Council, a forum created in 1996 to
tackle issues arising from increased Arctic activity.
The
landmark Paris agreement included commitments by most nations to
reduce carbon emissions contributing to climate change but lacked any
enforcement mechanism, leaving open who will pay costs that will rise
into the trillions of dollars.
Current
U.S. targets for cuts in greenhouse gases by the Obama administration
for 2025 fall far short of what scientists say is needed to rein in
rising temperatures.
"What
we did in Paris ... is critical now to be implemented, but it's not
even enough," he said. "We have to all move faster in order
to embrace new energy policies that are sustainable, that are clean,
all of which are there for the using if governments and private
sector make the right choices."
U.S.
Republican Presidential nominee Donald Trump has said he would
renegotiate America's role in the climate agreement if he becomes
president.
HUMAN
CONTRIBUTION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
By
visiting Greenland and the Arctic research post at Ny-Alesund in
Norway's far-north, Kerry focused on some of the most visible impacts
of climate change.
"There
is no mistaking that we are contributing to climate change, we human
beings have choices that can undo the damage," said Kerry.
"There is profound change throughout the Arctic."
Jakobshavn
is one of the world's biggest glaciers and the most active in the
Arctic, where ice sheets are melting at a rate faster than ever
before.
David
Holland, a New York University scientist studying changes on
Jakobshavn, explained that the glacier could retreat by about 62
miles (100 kilometers) over the next 100 years if the thawing of its
ice sheet continues at its current pace.
If
Greenland's ice sheets all melted, that would raise sea levels by
about 6 meters (20 feet) over thousands of years. That is modest
compared to what could happen if Antarctica thaws, said Holland.
Two
developments in recent days show the magnitude of the challenge. For
the first time in 4 million years, levels of carbon dioxide - a
heat-trapping gas produced by burning fossil fuels - hit 400 parts
per million in Antarctica, according to the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration.
The
threshold shows the rising levels of climate pollution.
Last
week, temperatures in Greenland's capital hit a record 24.8 degrees
Celsius (76.6 Fahrenheit) for a single day in June, according to
records dating back to 1958. Worldwide, 2016 has set repeated monthly
records after a record warm 2015.
"GIGANTIC
TRANSFORMATION"
"This
is gigantic transformation taking place," said Kerry. "You
can see it with the naked eye, as you see where the ice has retreated
from just in the last 15, 20 years, where the marks are still left."
The
Arctic is warming at about twice the global average, partly because
the melting of the ice cover has revealed darker ground and water
underneath that soak up even more heat.
"Things
are changing and we are perhaps the last generation that can do
something about it," said Jensen.
This
new access to the ground underneath has opened the Arctic to
increased political and commercial competition, including exploration
for oil and minerals by countries that used to have no access to the
region.
Aboard
a research vessel at Ny-Alesund, the northernmost non-military post
in the world, Kerry warned that exploiting newly accessible resources
would undermine the carbon-reduction strategy of the Paris accord. He
also said the public was still not sufficiently conscious of the
challenge ahead.
"Even
where there is awareness, the steps people are taking are not big
enough, fast enough. We have a huge distance to travel," he said
while visiting Ny-Alesund.
Temperatures
there are now between six to 11 degrees warmer than normal, said
Jan-Gunner Winther, director of the Norwegian Polar Institute, who
wonders whether the changes signal a tipping point.
"We
have more questions than answers," says Winther, "We are in
the midst of a change that we have no comparison with in history
because it is so much more rapid," he said.
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