Nature doesn't give a fuck who is president of the United States.
Physics Doesn’t Really Care Who Was Elected
9
November, 2016
Donald
Trump has said climate change is a Chinese hoax. His presidency
raises the prospect of a climate denier atop the Environmental
Protection Agency and an oil and gas billionaire running the Energy
Department. He could pull the U.S. — and its 15 percent of all
global carbon emissions — out
of the Paris Agreement.
This
information has made his supporters happy and his detractors furious.
This information also matters not one iota to the climate.
Climate
change doesn't care who the president is.
Credit: Carlo Allegri/REUTERS
Climate
change does not care about the law of the land in the U.S. It cares
about the laws of physics. Trump can change laws in the U.S. He can’t
change them in the atmosphere.
Credit: Carlo Allegri/REUTERS
In
the coming months, there’s going to be a lot of speculation about
what’s in store for the U.S. when it comes toclimate
policy at home and abroad.
Here’s a reminder of the climate change impacts we’re already
dealing with, and what we can expect. It’s not an exhaustive list,
merely the most clear, obvious impacts based on simple realities of
physics. The world will have to take heed
or deal with the consequences on society.
Carbon dioxide passed the 400 parts per million milestone. Permanently
This
was the year carbon dioxide passed the 400
ppm threshold.
It’s largely a symbolic threshold, but it’s one that serves as a
reminder that our fossil fuel addiction has caused carbon dioxide in
the atmosphere to increase 42 percent compared to pre-industrial
levels. And it’s at the root of everything that follows.
2016 is going to be the hottest year on record
That comes
on the heels of
a record hot 2015 and a record hot 2014. The world has warmed about
1°F compared to pre-industrial times.
Extreme weather events have become more likely
A
warmer atmosphere can hold more water, fueling
heavy downpours.
Climate Central’s weather attribution looked at two notable extreme
rainfall events this year — Louisiana’s
epic rains in
August and France’s
deluge in
May — and found climate change made them more likely. You can
expect heavy downpours to continue becoming more common as the world
warms.
Sea level rise is making flooding more common
The
oceans have risen about a foot over the past century as waters have
warmed and ice sheets and glaciers have melted. That’s made coastal
flooding way more common in the U.S. According to a Climate Central
report last month,76
percent of coastal flood days over
the past 10 years can be tied to climate change-fueled sea level
rise.
Arctic sea ice is disappearing. Fast
This
year saw the second-lowest
Arctic sea ice extent on
record. The Northwest
Passage opened up
this summer. As of October, regrowth was so slow that the Arctic
was missing
a chunk of ice the
size of the entire eastern half of the U.S. This is right in line
with trends of an increasingly ice-free Arctic.
A
comparison of the extension of older sea ice in the Arctic in
September 1984 and September 2016.
Credit: NASA Earth Observatory
Credit: NASA Earth Observatory
The Antarctic ice sheet is becoming unstable
The
massive stores of ice at the bottom of the world are facing a watery
future. A crack
has formed across
a massive ice shelf and scientists have been “struck by how high
the loss is” at some
glaciers in West Antarctica as
warm waters eat them from the bottom up.
The oceans have been record warm — and it’s killing coral
The
world has had three straight years of unprecedented
coral bleaching in
all ocean basins due largely to extreme
ocean heat.
If the planet warms by 1.5°C (2.7°F), coral reefs will likely go
extinct. And right now the planet is on its way to passing
that threshold unless
carbon pollution is seriously curtailed.
Oh, and oceans are also acidifying
Carbon
pollution is also acidifying oceans and in the process, stressing
reefs and shell-forming organisms. It’s likely already
started dissolving
some of Florida’s reefs,
a trend that could continue as carbon pollution keeps rising.
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