Sunday, September 30, 2012

Understanding what's happening to the weather all over

Al Gore rallies citizen deputies to break through climate-change denial while there’s still (a little) hope.

 

Crossing the Line: Satellite data reveals how the new record-low Arctic Sea ice coverage, from Sept. 16, compares to the average minimum coverage over the past 30 years (in yellow). Sea-ice maps use data from NASA's Nimbus-7 satellite and the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program.
Crossing the Line: Satellite data reveals how the new record-low Arctic Sea ice coverage, from Sept. 16, compares to the average minimum coverage over the past 30 years (in yellow). Sea-ice maps use data from NASA's Nimbus-7 satellite and the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program. NASA/Goddard Scientific Visualization Studio
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We are almost completely f%#&ed

Al Gore rallies citizen deputies to break through climate-change denial while there’s still (a little) hope.

If Al Gore’s environmental truth was inconvenient before, now it’s outright uncomfortable.

Last year was the earth’s hottest on record. Ever. 

That triggered extremes: A drought-generated dust storm reached 50 miles wide and 6,000 feet tall, engulfing Phoenix, Ariz. Tropical Storm Irene hit Killington, Vt., which has a ski mountain tall enough to see Canada – and it’s not too often you see the words “tropical” and “Canada” in the same sentence. Typhoon Megi dumped 45 inches of rain on Taiwan in 48 hours, forcing more than 350,000 people to evacuate.

And this year has scorched 2011. Over a recent month-and-a-half stretch, the U.S. Department of Agriculture designated 1,692 counties disaster areas due to drought, with about 80 percent of the country’s agricultural land affected. This comes after Russia stopped exporting food due to weather-related crop failures and resulting shortages. The worst drought in more than 100 years hit both North Korea and South Korea. On July 15, Kuwait hit an all-time high of 128.5 degrees Fahrenheit.

National Geographic reports that between 1998 and 2011, there have been 87 severe weather events in the U.S., and each caused at least $1 billion in damages, though they were comparatively modest economically compared to Hurricane Katrina, which topped out at $146 billion. The total disaster price tag nearly doubled the cost of the previous 16-year period. 

Severe weather events, like stronger hurricanes, harsher droughts, wilder floods and fiercer firestorms, are happening with greater frequency. Scientists have been warning us that this – the wallop of planet warming hitting harder and more frequently – was coming.

Only leaders and policymakers have failed to put up a fight. In the presidential dialogue ahead of November’s election, the environment is most conspicuous by its absence.

Last month former vice president and Inconvenient Truth creator Al Gore spoke in San Francisco to a select group of Climate Reality Project volunteers about that pattern of disaster and silence. The private event – designed to train people how to debunk environmental myths, educate communities on the current crisis and share solutions – drew participants from 46 states and 47 countries.

“Down in Tennessee we have an old saying: ‘If you see a turtle on top of a fence post, you can be pretty sure it didn’t get there by itself,’” Gore said. “‘If you see a turtle on top of every 10 fence posts, something’s going on.’ 

“These are turtles on the fence posts. These are the once-in-a-thousand-year events which come along every two years now. These are the kinds of conditions that are associated with the droughts and the big floods and the fires and stronger storms. This is reality. This is happening now.”

Seven years have passed since Gore’s Truth shared a reality about climate change, aka global warming, that most of the public knew very little about. There was shock, outcry, and… fizzle. Gore’s message seemed to evaporate, like boiling water forgotten on a stove, even as the crisis gets worse and urgency grows. 

Just this week, Grist energy and politics reporter David Roberts paraphrased the results of a study by the United Kingdom’s National Weather Service, Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research and the Grantham Institute. 

“The most extreme climate ‘alarmists’ in U.S. politics are not nearly alarmed enough,” he writes. “The chances of avoiding catastrophic global temperature rise are not nil, exactly, but they are slim-to-nil, according to a new analysis prepared for the U.K. government.”

So the question for Gore seems self-evident: What now?

“Even beginning the conversation about climate change can be challenging,” he says. “With blogs, social media, 24-hour cable news and well-funded denial campaigns promoted by the fossil fuel industry, it’s difficult to know what to believe or how to begin to solve the crisis.

“Because of this, one of the most important things you can do as an individual is to learn the facts about how the climate crisis is impacting your community. Then reach out to family, friends, and neighbors to tell your story, and together, demand that your local leaders take action.”

•••
Coming to the world of freelance writing from a background in science and engineering, I understood the real and factual threat of global warming early on. But I still wanted to see its effects for myself. 

I left my Monterey home on a 2006-07 expedition to Antarctica led by an ecological safari company filled with naturalists, a Honolulu Zoo veterinarian, hardcore birders and nature photographers who contribute to publications like Time and National Geographic. 

That December, the month before I arrived in Antarctica, a king penguin was spotted on the Antarctic Peninsula very near Palmer Station, one of three U.S. research bases in Antarctic bases.

This was strange. King penguins live in warmer waters and islands hundreds of miles north of Antarctica. They are nothing like the emperor penguins we all know from March of the Penguins, which thrive in the abominable temperatures at the South Pole. Antarctica was opening its freezer door, becoming warm enough for some warmer-weather animals to step inside.

Before arriving at Palmer, we island-hopped by Zodiac, observing skuas, Weddell seals and blue-eyed shags. But it was the little chicks of another species of small penguin – a typical inhabitant of the area, the gentoo – that made my heart drop.

It was so hot they panted like dogs. Their little wings stretched and trembled at their sides. Their beaks sagged open, exposing their normally hidden red tongues. Each miserable short breath they took seemed a rush.

Born with thick down feathers, the chicks couldn’t even dip in the ice-cold water because they would drown. They were left to wait as many as seven weeks in the heat until their swimming feathers matured.

After the trip, I got word from Moss Landing Marine Laboratories adjunct professor David Ainley – a penguin expert who has logged time in Antarctica since the early ’70s and helps run penguinscience.com – that “panting” is normal for penguins when temps rise. Gentoos are adaptable enough to adverse conditions, he added, that they won’t be on the front lines of species lost to the radically changing world.

But the good news was short-lived.

Warmer air over the cold, mountainous continent holds more moisture, which means more precipitation. This can wet gentoo chicks’ down feathers and – followed by a frost – prove fatal. Antarctic Peninsula winter temps have increased by 16 degrees Fahrenheit since Ainley started visiting, and mid-ocean Antarctic temperatures have ticked up.

“For that to happen,” he says quietly, “even less than a degree centigrade, that requires a mind-boggling amount of heat. That’s the most scary thing.”

•••
This summer, I interviewed activist, author and climate-change scholar Bill McKibben, the man credited with first bringing global warming from the scientific community to wider audiences with the book The End of Nature. When asked why so little progress has been made by governments and citizens to stop global warming, his response was blunt: “Because the fossil-fuel industry is more powerful… They’re the richest industry the planet has ever seen, and they like things the way they are.”

A couple of weeks later, McKibben published an article in Rolling Stone about three numbers that tell a terrifying story about global warming: 2; 565; and 2,795.

“The official position of Planet Earth at the moment is that we can’t raise the [average global] temperature more than 2 degrees Celsius,” he wrote. That number came from a under-attended 2009 Copenhagen climate conference in which global leaders estimated this temperature rise was safe enough. 

Scientists, however, were dubious of the limit. McKibben quoted NASA climatologist James Hansen: “The target that has been talked about in international negotiations for 2 degrees of warming is actually a prescription for long-term disaster.”

To stay below this limit of 2 degrees Celsius – and average global temperature is up about 0.8 degrees in the industrialization era, so our cup of manageable global warming pollution is already nearly half full – the total mass of global warming pollution in the atmosphere would need to stay below 565 gigatons. 

The fossil fuel industry has an existing reserve with enough coal, oil, and natural gas that, if burned, would produce 2,795 gigatons of pollution. That’s enough to fill up five cups.

“This number is the scariest of all,” McKibben writes.

Gore understands that this news is hard to hear. 

“We are all vulnerable to denial,” he says. “If something is unpleasant to think about – and the potential end of future civilization qualifies as an unpleasant thought – then people don’t want to think about. And if somebody will throw them a little lifeline and say, ‘Hey, you don’t have think about it. It’s not real, or it probably isn’t real,’ then people grab hold of that thing. ‘Thank goodness I don’t have to think about it. Thank goodness I don’t have to do anything about it.’ So, in other words, these deniers don’t have to win the argument; all they have to do is to create enough doubt in order to convince people that it is premature to come to a realization that it is real.” (See sidebar, this page.)

Right now, Gore adds, there are four lobbyists trying to suppress climate – change solutions for each member of Congress. That’s a lot of firepower: 2,795 gigatons of fossil fuels can buy a lot of allegiance.

“The Koch brothers have a combined wealth of $50 billion, meaning they trail only Bill Gates on the list of richest Americans,” McKibben says. “They’ve made most of their money in hydrocarbons, they know any system to regulate carbon would cut those profits, and they reportedly plan to lavish as much as $200 million on this year’s elections.” 

It is not negligence that’s preventing solutions to climate change; it is greed.

“We need to view the fossil fuel industry in a new light,” McKibben says. “It has become a rogue industry, reckless like no other force on earth. It is public enemy number one to the survival of our planetary civilization.”

Forget Occupy Wall Street. It’s time for Occupy Exxon.

•••
The day after my Palmer Station visit, I took a hike at Neko Harbour. I was sweating like a melting glacier, even without a jacket. The expedition leader was shirtless. 

When my companions returned to the landing site, I stayed back on top of bare rock where the ice had long since melted away from the glacier. I couldn’t stop thinking, This was Antarctica. It was supposed to be the coldest place on Earth.
I watched the glaciers around me tumble in the sea. When ice breaks apart like that and comes crashing down, it sounds like cannon during battle. 

The freshly revealed faces of ice behind the falling chunks glowed electric blue, the natural color of ice after pockets of air in glaciers are pressed out over the eons it takes glaciers to form.

I felt the air being pressed out of me. It was the loneliest and most helpless I’ve felt. But unlike those gentoo penguin chicks stuck in their down coats, I was able to take off my jacket. And I was able to raise my voice.

•••
Telley Madina knows the feeling of helplessness. 

For an hour he didn’t know if his sister had been claimed by Hurricane Katrina’s unflinching flood waters. For an hour there was nothing he could do. Then two. Then the hours stretched into a day, then another. And another.

He didn’t sleep. He didn’t eat. But he did pray.

“It was the longest four days of my life,” he says. “I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy.”

His sister was rescued and packed into the New Orleans Convention center. But the deaths and anarchy that accumulated meant the rescue didn’t make him feel that much better. Work as the coastal communities program officer for Oxfam America in New Orleans hasn’t done much to ease a frustration that sent him to the Climate Reality conference.

“It feels like it is out of sight, out of mind,” he says. “And I don’t know why that is the case, because every storm season, we get our butts kicked.” 

He’s scared to lose his home and his city, and thinks it might be irresponsible to raise his 4-year-old son there.

“If you’re gonna live here, and not do anything, I don’t know how long we can have a reasonable expectation to stay and be safe,” he says. 

The Louisiana governor’s office reports that a football-field-sized piece of wetland is inundated every 38 minutes, which means weaker storms have stronger impacts. This year’s Hurricane Isaac, though only a category 1, still flooded places Katrina couldn’t. “Any given day, the severity of any hurricane can increase,” Madina says. “We need to be very, very clear on how climate change is affecting environment.”

Susan Beckett of Boulder, Colo., and Jim Poyser of Indianapolis, Ind., didn’t need to travel to hear Gore say, “We’ve broken more records this year just in the first eight months [than] last year. The hottest month ever measured in the U.S. was last month. Globally, this is 327 months in a row, I believe, that have been hotter than the 20th century average.” They had already felt it.

Beckett, energy program manager at the Environmental Center of the University of Colorado, has repeatedly offered her house to those threatened by drought-fueled firestorms statewide. Experts estimate these fires are seven times as likely in the western states now that their average temperature has gone up 3 degrees Fahrenheit, extending fire season by 75 days since the 1970s.

In Poyser’s state, crop failures and water rationing have overtaken farmlands. He fears life in America’s heartland will be irreparably changed. As an editor for two independent newspapers, Indiana Living Green and Nuvo, he has written headlines like “Extreme Heat: the New Normal” amid a maelstrom of similar news around his state.

As Gore says: “There’s been no year like this year.” 

Climate Reality Project President Maggie Fox gets it. After working on climate change for more than two decades, it came home to her in Colorado.

“To see a fire coming over the top of a mountain less than a mile from your house that you can look directly at from your porch… ” she says, choking up.

But she finds hope in the 1,000 newly minted leaders who came from as far away as Argentina and Australia to attend the Gore-led training – and committed to giving at least 10 of their own talks.

“People exhibit leadership in a magical myriad of ways,” she says.

Fox and Gore are hoping it’s those citizen stories – told person-to-person by those who have felt them personally – that will affect audiences in ways photographs of distant polar bears and impassioned speeches by environmental activists cannot.

Or the truth goes from inconvenient to uncomfortable to irreversible. 

Mark C. Anderson contributed to this report.

Request a free Climate Reality Project talk by visiting www.climaterealityproject.org
end quote from:

Al Gore rallies citizen deputies to break through climate-change denial while there’s still (a little) hope.

The human race doesn't tend to be a unified whole yet in it's decisions or actions. We are still tied to country rather than to the world which gives everyone of us life. And without which we might be trying to breathe in space somewhere or having to live underground and air condition or manufacture our own air and food somehow. So, not having a habitable planet will really reduce populations of every type of living thing as this thing goes on longer and longer.

I think my favorite fact is that the average temperature at one  time at the north pole was 76 degrees Fahrenheit average temperature. Then listen to the next part, "It took 1 million years of ferns absorbing the CO2 that lived from the North pole to the equator to get back to a climate like we knew it to be during the 1900s in the 20th century once again. This is at the macro level that we actually are dealing with.

So, I guess what I'm saying is that once we get to a certain stage the human race might go extinct before we ever get back to anything like the 1900s ever again in regard to glaciers on mountains, ice caps and snow being something that is normal anywhere on earth. In that world Hawaii would be at the north pole in climate and the rest likely would be pretty unbearable.

IT is difficult to say when the tipping point in regard to people worldwide mobilizing themselves in regard to trying to make real changes. Likely that time will be reached when instead of thousands dying in weather disasters it moves to millions at a time in a weather disaster. And when we reach a number like 100 million dying in a year from the weather which is about how many died in World War II maybe then people will take this more seriously. But I hope the actual tipping point is much lower. Because who wants to see 100 million people die in a year from awful weather events? However, the way things are going it is eventually inevitable over time if nothing serious is done. However, even if things are done it could happen anyway because we might have had to start this a century ago to actually stop it in time.

I wonder if other space faring civilizations like ours ended this way from the weather and were driven  back to the stone age before this in our prehistory?

 



 

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