Friday, February 25, 2005

Fw: Apocalypse Now: Sleepwalking to End of the Earth- more info


----- Original Message -----
From: "Rich"
To: "carol wolman"
Sent: Friday, February 25, 2005 4:12 PM
Subject: Re: Apocalypse Now: Sleepwalking to End of the Earth

> And the problem is that thy are still not looking at all of the positive
> feedback systems in effect. If you look at a good chart of the temperature
> for the last 50 years you can see that it is grwoing exponentially.
>
> The carbon sinks are decreasing more rapidly than expected, the fossil
fuel
> is still increasing, the time constant of the co2 in the atmosphere is
> around 60 years. This means taht if we froze fossil fules instantly at the
> amount we are now consuming it would be over 60 years before the CO2 in
the
> atmosphere stopped rising.
>
> Mean while in Califonia we are haveing record rainfalls which are almost
> certainly at least partially a result of global warming, In 2003 some
30000
> people died of an extreme heat wave almost certianly paartially a result
of
> global warming..
>
> The IPCC has consitantly been surprised by things being more rapid than
they
> predicted. That is no real reflection on them. Scientists are dedicated to
> being certain of what they say so then tend to be very conservative in
their
> predictions. As contrasted wtith the politcal leaders in the US who claim
> all sorts of wild things.
>
> Richard
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "carol wolman"
> To:
> Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2005 10:55 AM
> Subject: Fw: Apocalypse Now: Sleepwalking to End of the Earth
>
>
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Flyby News"
> > To:
> > Sent: Wednesday, February 09, 2005 3:39 AM
> > Subject: Apocalypse Now: Sleepwalking to End of the Earth
> >
> >
> >>
> >> Flyby News
> >> Editor - Jonathan Mark
> >> 08 February 2005 - Part 1
> >> Apocalypse Now: Sleepwalking to End of the Earth
> >>
> >> "Then the biggest-ever study of climate change . . .
> >> reported that it could prove to be twice as
> >> catastrophic as the IPCC's worst predictions.
> >> And an international task force - also reporting
> >> to Tony Blair, and co-chaired by his close ally, Stephen Byers -
> >> concluded that we could reach "the point of no return" in a decade."
> >>
> >> - Geoffrey Lean
> >> Apocalypse Now:
> >> How Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth"
> >>
> >>
*************************************************************************
> >> This issue is posted in best format for Reading, Linking, and Printing,
> >> from recent issues = = = > http://www.FlybyNews.com
> >>
*************************************************************************
> >>
> >> Editor's Notes:
> >>
> >> "How Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth" is blatant
reality!
> >> Please consider to read this, and links at the end for more on Global
> > Warming,
> >> and on appropriate technology to significantly reduce CO2 pollution
> > emissions.
> >> Let's do something for seven generations, for those here now and for
the
> >> future. The mentioning in this following article that nuclear power
> >> should
> > be
> >> considered to lessen the threat of global warming is ludicrous. This
> >> would
> >> only make matters worse, by the emissions released by truckloads of
> > shipments
> >> to build and care for the material, never mind the threat of nuclear
harm
> > by
> >> sabotage, terrorism, and earth-climate changes.
> >>
>
>> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
> > ----
> >>
> >> 1) How Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth
> >>
> >> Apocalypse Now: How Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth
> >> Published on Sunday, February 6, 2005 by the lndependent/UK
> >>
> >> Floods, storms and droughts. Melting Arctic ice, shrinking glaciers,
> > oceans
> >> turning to acid. The world's top scientists warned last week that
> > dangerous
> >> climate change is taking place today, not the day after tomorrow. You
> > don't
> >> believe it? Then, says Geoffrey Lean, read this...
> >>
> >> by Geoffrey Lean
> >>
> >> Future historians, looking back from a much hotter and less hospitable
> > world,
> >> are likely to play special attention to the first few weeks of 2005. As
> > they
> >> puzzle over how a whole generation could have sleepwalked into
disaster -
> >> destroying the climate that has allowed human civilization to flourish
> > over
> >> the past 11,000 years - they may well identify the past weeks as the
time
> > when
> >> the last alarms sounded.
> >>
> >> Last week, 200 of the world's leading climate scientists - meeting at
> >> Tony
> >> Blair's request at the Met Office's new headquarters at Exeter - issued
> > the
> >> most urgent warning to date that dangerous climate change is taking
> >> place,
> > and
> >> that time is running out.
> >>
> >> Next week the Kyoto Protocol, the international treaty that tries to
> > control
> >> global warming, comes into force after a seven-year delay. But it is
> >> clear
> >> that the protocol does not go nearly far enough.
> >>
> >> The alarms have been going off since the beginning of one of the
warmest
> >> Januaries on record. First, Dr Rajendra Pachauri - chairman of the
> > official
> >> Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) - told a UN conference
> >> in
> >> Mauritius that the pollution which causes global warming has reached
> >> "dangerous" levels.
> >>
> >> Then the biggest-ever study of climate change, based at Oxford
> >> University,
> >> reported that it could prove to be twice as catastrophic as the IPCC's
> > worst
> >> predictions. And an international task force - also reporting to Tony
> > Blair,
> >> and co-chaired by his close ally, Stephen Byers - concluded that we
could
> >> reach "the point of no return" in a decade.
> >>
> >> Finally, the UK head of Shell, Lord Oxburgh, took time out - just
before
> > his
> >> company reported record profits mainly achieved by selling oil, one of
> >> the
> >> main causes of the problem - to warn that unless governments take
urgent
> >> action there "will be a disaster".
> >>
> >> But it was last week at the Met Office's futuristic glass headquarters,
> >> incongruously set in a dreary industrial estate on the outskirts of
> > Exeter,
> >> that it all came together. The conference had been called by the Prime
> >> Minister to advise him on how to "avoid dangerous climate change". He
> > needed
> >> help in persuading the world to prioritize the issue this year during
> >> Britain's presidencies of the EU and the G8 group of economic powers.
> >>
> >> The conference opened with the Secretary of State for the Environment,
> >> Margaret Beckett, warning that "a significant impact" from global
warming
> > "is
> >> already inevitable". It continued with presentations from top
scientists
> > and
> >> economists from every continent. These showed that some dangerous
climate
> >> change was already taking place and that catastrophic events once
thought
> >> highly improbable were now seen as likely (see panel). Avoiding the
worst
> > was
> >> technically simple and economically cheap, they said, provided that
> >> governments could be persuaded to take immediate action.
> >>
> >> About halfway through I realized that I had been here before. In the
> > summer of
> >> 1986 the world's leading nuclear experts gathered in Vienna for an
> >> inquest
> >> into the accident at Chernobyl. The head of the Russian delegation
showed
> > a
> >> film shot from a helicopter, and we suddenly found ourselves gazing
down
> > on
> >> the red-hot exposed reactor core.
> >>
> >> It was all, of course, much less dramatic at Exeter. But as paper
> >> followed
> >> learned paper, once again a group of world authorities were staring at
a
> >> crisis they had devoted their lives to trying to avoid.
> >>
> >> I am willing to bet there were few in the room who did not sense their
> >> children or grandchildren standing invisibly at their shoulders. The
> >> conference formally concluded that climate change was "already
occurring"
> > and
> >> that "in many cases the risks are more serious than previously
thought".
> > But
> >> the cautious scientific language scarcely does justice to the sense of
> >> the
> >> meeting.
> >>
> >> We learned that glaciers are shrinking around the world. Arctic sea ice
> > has
> >> lost almost half its thickness in recent decades. Natural disasters are
> >> increasing rapidly around the world. Those caused by the weather - such
> >> as
> >> droughts, storms, and floods - are rising three times faster than
those -
> > such
> >> as earthquakes - that are not.
> >>
> >> We learned that bird populations in the North Sea collapsed last year,
> > after
> >> the sand eels on which they feed left its warmer waters - and how the
> > number
> >> of scientific papers recording changes in ecosystems due to global
> >> warming
> > has
> >> escalated from 14 to more than a thousand in five years.
> >>
> >> Worse, leading scientists warned of catastrophic changes that once they
> > had
> >> dismissed as "improbable". The meeting was particularly alarmed by
> > powerful
> >> evidence, first reported in The Independent on Sunday last July, that
the
> >> oceans are slowly turning acid, threatening all marine life.
> >>
> >> Professor Chris Rapley, director of the British Antarctic Survey,
> > presented
> >> new evidence that the West Antarctic ice sheet is beginning to melt,
> >> threatening eventually to raise sea levels by 15ft: 90 per cent of the
> > world's
> >> people live near current sea levels. Recalling that the IPCC's last
> >> report
> > had
> >> called Antarctica "a slumbering giant", he said: "I would say that this
> >> is
> > now
> >> an awakened giant."
> >>
> >> Professor Mike Schlesinger, of the University of Illinois, reported
that
> > the
> >> shutdown of the Gulf Stream, once seen as a "low probability event",
was
> > now
> >> 45 per cent likely this century, and 70 per cent probable by 2200. If
it
> > comes
> >> sooner rather than later it will be catastrophic for Britain and
northern
> >> Europe, giving us a climate like Labrador (which shares our latitude)
> >> even
> > as
> >> the rest of the world heats up: if it comes later it could be
beneficial,
> >> moderating the worst of the warming.
> >>
> >> The experts at Exeter were virtually unanimous about the danger,
> >> mirroring
> > the
> >> attitude of the climate science community as a whole: humanity is to
> > blame.
> >> There were a few skeptics at Exeter, including Andrei Illarionov, an
> > adviser
> >> to Russia's President Putin, who last year called the Kyoto Protocol
"an
> >> interstate Auschwitz". But in truth it is much easier to find skeptics
> > among
> >> media pundits in London or neo-cons in Washington than among climate
> >> scientists. Even the few contrarian climatalogists publish little
> >> research
> > to
> >> support their views, concentrating on questioning the work of others.
> >>
> >> Now a new scientific consensus is emerging - that the warming must be
> >> kept
> >> below an average increase of two degrees centigrade if catastrophe is
to
> > be
> >> avoided. This almost certainly involves keeping concentrations of
carbon
> >> dioxide, the main cause of climate change, below 400 parts per million.
> >>
> >> Unfortunately we are almost there, with concentrations exceeding 370ppm
> > and
> >> rising, but experts at the conference concluded that we could go
briefly
> > above
> >> the danger level so long as we brought it down rapidly afterwards. They
> > added
> >> that this would involve the world reducing emissions by 50 per cent by
> > 2050 -
> >> and rich countries cutting theirs by 30 per cent by 2020.
> >>
> >> Economists stressed there is little time for delay. If action is put
off
> > for a
> >> decade, it will need to be twice as radical; if it has to wait 20
years,
> > it
> >> will cost between three and seven times as much.
> >>
> >> The good news is that it can be done with existing technology, by
cutting
> >> energy waste, expanding the use of renewable sources, growing trees and
> > crops
> >> (which remove carbon dioxide from the air) to turn into fuel, capturing
> > the
> >> gas before it is released from power stations, and - maybe - using more
> >> nuclear energy.
> >>
> >> The better news is that it would not cost much: one estimate suggested
> >> the
> >> cost would be about 1 per cent of Europe's GNP spread over 20 years;
> > another
> >> suggested it meant postponing an expected fivefold increase in world
> > wealth by
> >> just two years. Many experts believe combating global warming would
> > increase
> >> prosperity, by bringing in new technologies.
> >>
> >> The big question is whether governments will act. President Bush's
> > opposition
> >> to international action remains the greatest obstacle. Tony Blair, by
> > almost
> >> universal agreement, remains the leader with the best chance of
> >> persuading
> > him
> >> to change his mind.
> >>
> >> But so far the Prime Minister has been more influenced by the President
> > than
> >> the other way round. He appears to be moving away from fighting for the
> >> pollution reductions needed in favor of agreeing on a vague pledge to
> > bring in
> >> new technologies sometime in the future.
> >>
> >> By then it will be too late. And our children and grandchildren will
> > wonder -
> >> as we do in surveying, for example, the drift into the First World
War -
> > "how
> >> on earth could they be so blind?"
> >>
> >> WATER WARS
> >>
> >> What could happen? Wars break out over diminishing water resources as
> >> populations grow and rains fail.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? Over 25 per cent more people than at present
> > are
> >> expected to live in countries where water is scarce in the future, and
> > global
> >> warming will make it worse.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? Former UN chief Boutros Boutros-Ghali has long said
> >> that
> > the
> >> next Middle East war will be fought for water, not oil.
> >>
> >> DISAPPEARING NATIONS
> >>
> >> What could happen? Low-lying island such as the Maldives and Tuvalu -
> >> with
> >> highest points only a few feet above sea-level - will disappear off the
> > face
> >> of the Earth.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? As the world heats up, sea levels are
rising,
> >> partly because glaciers are melting, and partly because the water in
the
> >> oceans expands as it gets warmer.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? Inevitable. Even if global warming stopped today, the
> > seas
> >> would continue to rise for centuries. Some small islands have already
> >> sunk
> > for
> >> ever. A year ago, Tuvalu was briefly submerged.
> >>
> >> FLOODING
> >>
> >> What could happen? London, New York, Tokyo, Bombay, many other cities
and
> > vast
> >> areas of countries from Britain to Bangladesh disappear under tens of
> >> feet
> > of
> >> water, as the seas rise dramatically.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? Ice caps in Greenland and Antarctica melt.
The
> >> Greenland ice sheet would raise sea levels by more than 20ft, the West
> >> Antarctic ice sheet by another 15ft.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? Scientists used to think it unlikely, but this year
> > reported
> >> that the melting of both ice caps had begun. It will take hundreds of
> > years,
> >> however, for the seas to rise that much.
> >>
> >> UNINHABITABLE EARTH
> >>
> >> What could happen? Global warming escalates to the point where the
> >> world's
> >> whole climate abruptly switches, turning it permanently into a much
> >> hotter
> > and
> >> less hospitable planet.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? A process involving "positive feedback"
causes
> > the
> >> warming to fuel itself, until it reaches a point that finally tips the
> > climate
> >> pattern over.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? Abrupt flips have happened in the prehistoric past.
> >> Scientists believe this is unlikely, at least in the foreseeable
future,
> > but
> >> increasingly they are refusing to rule it out.
> >>
> >> RAINFOREST FIRES
> >>
> >> What could happen? Famously wet tropical forests, such as those in the
> > Amazon,
> >> go up in flames, destroying the world's richest wildlife habitats and
> >> releasing vast amounts of carbon dioxide to speed global warming.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? Britain's Met Office predicted in 1999 that
> > much of
> >> the Amazon will dry out and die within 50 years, making it ready for
> > sparks -
> >> from humans or lightning - to set it ablaze.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? Very, if the predictions turn out to be right.
Already
> > there
> >> have been massive forest fires in Borneo and Amazonia, casting palls of
> >> hi
> > ghly
> >> polluting smoke over vast areas.
> >>
> >> THE BIG FREEZE
> >>
> >> What could happen? Britain and northern Europe get much colder because
> >> the
> >> Gulf Stream, which provides as much heat as the sun in winter, fails.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? Melting polar ice sends fresh water into the
> > North
> >> Atlantic. The less salty water fails to generate the underwater current
> > which
> >> the Gulf Stream needs.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? About evens for a Gulf Steam failure this century,
said
> >> scientists last week.
> >>
> >> STARVATION
> >>
> >> What could happen? Food production collapses in Africa, for example, as
> >> rainfall dries up and droughts increase. As farmland turns to desert,
> > people
> >> flee in their millions in search of food.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? Rainfall is expected to decrease by up to 60
> > per
> >> cent in winter and 30 per cent in summer in southern Africa this
century.
> > By
> >> some estimates, Zambia could lose almost all its farms.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? Pretty likely unless the world tackles both global
> > warming
> >> and Africa's decline. Scientists agree that droughts will increase in a
> > warmer
> >> world.
> >>
> >> ACID OCEANS
> >>
> >> What could happen? The seas will gradually turn more and more acid.
Coral
> >> reefs, shellfish and plankton, on which all life depends, will die off.
> > Much
> >> of the life of the oceans will become extinct.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? The oceans have absorbed half the carbon
> > dioxide,
> >> the main cause of global warming, so far emitted by humanity. This
forms
> >> dilute carbonic acid, which attacks corals and shells.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? It is already starting. Scientists warn that the
> > chemistry
> >> of the oceans is changing in ways unprecedented for 20 million years.
> >> Some
> >> predict that the world's coral reefs will die within 35 years.
> >>
> >> DISEASE
> >>
> >> What could happen? Malaria - which kills two million people worldwide
> > every
> >> year - reaches Britain with foreign travelers, gets picked up by
British
> >> mosquitos and becomes endemic in the warmer climate.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? Four of our 40 mosquito species can carry
the
> >> disease, and hundreds of travelers return with it annually. The insects
> > breed
> >> faster, and feed more, in warmer temperatures.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? A Department of Health study has suggested it may
> >> happen
> > by
> >> 2050: the Environment Agency has mentioned 2020. Some experts say it is
> >> miraculous that it has not happened already.
> >>
> >> HURRICANES
> >>
> >> What could happen? Hurricanes, typhoons and violent storms proliferate,
> > grow
> >> even fiercer, and hit new areas. Last September's repeated battering of
> >> Florida and the Caribbean may be just a foretaste of what is to come,
say
> >> scientists.
> >>
> >> How would this come about? The storms gather their energy from warm
seas,
> > and
> >> so, as oceans heat up, fiercer ones occur and threaten areas where at
> > present
> >> the seas are too cool for such weather.
> >>
> >> How likely is it? Scientists are divided over whether storms will get
> >> more
> >> frequent and whether the process has already begun.
> >>
> >> © 2005 Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.
> >>
> >> ----------
> >>
> >> Also in Environment by the lndependent/UK
> >> Greenhouse gas 'threatens marine life'
> >> The ultimate high-pressure job: surviving on the seabed
> >> Global warming: scientists reveal timetable
> >> Dramatic change in West Antarctic ice could produce
> >>
> >> For original posting with above links, see:
> >> http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/story.jsp?story=608209
> >>
> >>
>
>> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
> > ----
> >>
> >> For more Flyby News resources, see:
> >> The Mounting Evidence of Global Warming!!!.
> >>
> >
http://www.flybynews.com/cgi-local/newspro/viewnews.cgi?newsid1014396414,102
> > 78
> >> ,
> >>
> >> For information on a technology to reduce CO2 pollution emissions, see:
> >> STIRLING Solution for Onsite Power Production
> >>
> >
http://www.flybynews.com/cgi-local/newspro/viewnews.cgi?newsid1019075905,598
> > 98
> >> ,m
> >>
>
>> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
> > ----
> >>
> >> The views expressed herein are the writers' own and not necessarily
those
> > of
> >> Flyby News.
> >> A "Fair Use Policy" that describes Flyby News' use of copyrighted
> >> material
> > is
> >> posted at flybynews.com.
> >> Your feedback for story suggestions and networking Flyby News are
> >> welcomed
> > and
> >> appreciated.
> >> You can write to the publisher/editor Jonathan Mark via email:
> >> info@flybynews.com
> >>
>
>> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
> > ----
> >> --
> >>
> >> Flyby News is educational and nonviolent in focus,
> >> and has supported critical campaigns for a healthy
> >> environment, human rights, justice, peace, and nonviolence,
> >> since the launching of NASA's Cassini space probe in 1997.
> >>
> >>
> >> >-----------------------Flyby News--------------------====>
> >> News Fit to Transmit in the post Cassini flyby era
> >> <<<>>> http://www.flybynews.com <<<>>>
> >> ------------------------------------------------------
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>

Fw: Lecture on DU and Iraqi children

 
----- Original Message -----
From: Karim A G
Sent: Friday, February 25, 2005 3:30 PM
Subject: Lecture on DU and Iraqi children

A MUST to know what the Coalition Forces have done in Iraq based in lies

 

Last night I went to a presentation by an Iraqi pediatrician at the Iraqi community center on Delridge Way.

 

She presented statistics for only ONE hospital in Basra which is where she practices.

 

She showed some charts with incidences of cancer among infants and children in that hospital before the first invasion by Bush The Father and since, including now after the invasion by Bush the Son. The best of the stats i.e., the ones with the LOWEST increases show an upswing of over 300%.

 

She showed statistics and pictures of infants born deformed or with cancer in charts and some in pictures.

 

She said the chart figures did not include the many times more incidences of miscarriages or those children whose parents did not bring them to the hospital because they thought the kids were done for and there was no medicine anyway so why bother? In answer to a question, she also clarified that her hospital is an ordinary one that does not specialize in cancer or in children's disease so her figures are not skewed because of a specialty; that there are a few other hospitals in Basra that also offer pediatric care.

 

She did say that hers is not a scientific study and that detailed scientific study needs to be done in order to establish direct causal relationship with DU and at this time, there is no agency willing to conduct such research. In her mind however, there is no doubt that the cause of the increase in birth defects and children's cancer is DU.

 

It was a most sobering evening.

 

She is making another presentation TONIGHT (Wed. 23rd) at Wykoff Hall in Seattle University. I urge those who can make it, to attend and I especially urge those who do not believe DU is as big a threat as "the liberals" make it out to be, to attend and ask questions.

 

Then be prepared to make life hell for the cowards who represent us in Congress (except McDermott) by asking them WHY they are not raising the issue in Congress.

 

DU is a threat to Humanity that is FAR, FAR, FAR greater than any issue that has ever faced us. Even landmines becomes a children's playground as compared to DU which has  half-life of 4.5 MILLION years. This means that in 4.5 million years DU is still present but with only half its strength. After impact DU particles become vaporized and then are capable of being wind-borne for hundreds of miles.

 

Folks, this is not about Iraq or Afghanistan although it is being used there in the hundreds of tons scale; this is about the entire Earth. To be sure Island USA is relatively safe from DU but do we not own some responsibility for what goes on overseas in our name?

 

Jeff Siddiqui, Associate Broker
Western Associates Real Estate
Seattle, WA 98103
pager: (206) 994-7398

 

Fw: Apocalypse Now: Sleepwalking to End of the Earth


----- Original Message -----
From: "Flyby News"
To:
Sent: Wednesday, February 09, 2005 3:39 AM
Subject: Apocalypse Now: Sleepwalking to End of the Earth

>
> Flyby News
> Editor - Jonathan Mark
> 08 February 2005 - Part 1
> Apocalypse Now: Sleepwalking to End of the Earth
>
> "Then the biggest-ever study of climate change . . .
> reported that it could prove to be twice as
> catastrophic as the IPCC's worst predictions.
> And an international task force - also reporting
> to Tony Blair, and co-chaired by his close ally, Stephen Byers -
> concluded that we could reach "the point of no return" in a decade."
>
> - Geoffrey Lean
> Apocalypse Now:
> How Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth"
>
> *************************************************************************
> This issue is posted in best format for Reading, Linking, and Printing,
> from recent issues = = = > http://www.FlybyNews.com
> *************************************************************************
>
> Editor's Notes:
>
> "How Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth" is blatant reality!
> Please consider to read this, and links at the end for more on Global
Warming,
> and on appropriate technology to significantly reduce CO2 pollution
emissions.
> Let's do something for seven generations, for those here now and for the
> future. The mentioning in this following article that nuclear power should
be
> considered to lessen the threat of global warming is ludicrous. This would
> only make matters worse, by the emissions released by truckloads of
shipments
> to build and care for the material, never mind the threat of nuclear harm
by
> sabotage, terrorism, and earth-climate changes.
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
>
> 1) How Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth
>
> Apocalypse Now: How Mankind is Sleepwalking to the End of the Earth
> Published on Sunday, February 6, 2005 by the lndependent/UK
>
> Floods, storms and droughts. Melting Arctic ice, shrinking glaciers,
oceans
> turning to acid. The world's top scientists warned last week that
dangerous
> climate change is taking place today, not the day after tomorrow. You
don't
> believe it? Then, says Geoffrey Lean, read this...
>
> by Geoffrey Lean
>
> Future historians, looking back from a much hotter and less hospitable
world,
> are likely to play special attention to the first few weeks of 2005. As
they
> puzzle over how a whole generation could have sleepwalked into disaster -
> destroying the climate that has allowed human civilization to flourish
over
> the past 11,000 years - they may well identify the past weeks as the time
when
> the last alarms sounded.
>
> Last week, 200 of the world's leading climate scientists - meeting at Tony
> Blair's request at the Met Office's new headquarters at Exeter - issued
the
> most urgent warning to date that dangerous climate change is taking place,
and
> that time is running out.
>
> Next week the Kyoto Protocol, the international treaty that tries to
control
> global warming, comes into force after a seven-year delay. But it is clear
> that the protocol does not go nearly far enough.
>
> The alarms have been going off since the beginning of one of the warmest
> Januaries on record. First, Dr Rajendra Pachauri - chairman of the
official
> Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) - told a UN conference in
> Mauritius that the pollution which causes global warming has reached
> "dangerous" levels.
>
> Then the biggest-ever study of climate change, based at Oxford University,
> reported that it could prove to be twice as catastrophic as the IPCC's
worst
> predictions. And an international task force - also reporting to Tony
Blair,
> and co-chaired by his close ally, Stephen Byers - concluded that we could
> reach "the point of no return" in a decade.
>
> Finally, the UK head of Shell, Lord Oxburgh, took time out - just before
his
> company reported record profits mainly achieved by selling oil, one of the
> main causes of the problem - to warn that unless governments take urgent
> action there "will be a disaster".
>
> But it was last week at the Met Office's futuristic glass headquarters,
> incongruously set in a dreary industrial estate on the outskirts of
Exeter,
> that it all came together. The conference had been called by the Prime
> Minister to advise him on how to "avoid dangerous climate change". He
needed
> help in persuading the world to prioritize the issue this year during
> Britain's presidencies of the EU and the G8 group of economic powers.
>
> The conference opened with the Secretary of State for the Environment,
> Margaret Beckett, warning that "a significant impact" from global warming
"is
> already inevitable". It continued with presentations from top scientists
and
> economists from every continent. These showed that some dangerous climate
> change was already taking place and that catastrophic events once thought
> highly improbable were now seen as likely (see panel). Avoiding the worst
was
> technically simple and economically cheap, they said, provided that
> governments could be persuaded to take immediate action.
>
> About halfway through I realized that I had been here before. In the
summer of
> 1986 the world's leading nuclear experts gathered in Vienna for an inquest
> into the accident at Chernobyl. The head of the Russian delegation showed
a
> film shot from a helicopter, and we suddenly found ourselves gazing down
on
> the red-hot exposed reactor core.
>
> It was all, of course, much less dramatic at Exeter. But as paper followed
> learned paper, once again a group of world authorities were staring at a
> crisis they had devoted their lives to trying to avoid.
>
> I am willing to bet there were few in the room who did not sense their
> children or grandchildren standing invisibly at their shoulders. The
> conference formally concluded that climate change was "already occurring"
and
> that "in many cases the risks are more serious than previously thought".
But
> the cautious scientific language scarcely does justice to the sense of the
> meeting.
>
> We learned that glaciers are shrinking around the world. Arctic sea ice
has
> lost almost half its thickness in recent decades. Natural disasters are
> increasing rapidly around the world. Those caused by the weather - such as
> droughts, storms, and floods - are rising three times faster than those -
such
> as earthquakes - that are not.
>
> We learned that bird populations in the North Sea collapsed last year,
after
> the sand eels on which they feed left its warmer waters - and how the
number
> of scientific papers recording changes in ecosystems due to global warming
has
> escalated from 14 to more than a thousand in five years.
>
> Worse, leading scientists warned of catastrophic changes that once they
had
> dismissed as "improbable". The meeting was particularly alarmed by
powerful
> evidence, first reported in The Independent on Sunday last July, that the
> oceans are slowly turning acid, threatening all marine life.
>
> Professor Chris Rapley, director of the British Antarctic Survey,
presented
> new evidence that the West Antarctic ice sheet is beginning to melt,
> threatening eventually to raise sea levels by 15ft: 90 per cent of the
world's
> people live near current sea levels. Recalling that the IPCC's last report
had
> called Antarctica "a slumbering giant", he said: "I would say that this is
now
> an awakened giant."
>
> Professor Mike Schlesinger, of the University of Illinois, reported that
the
> shutdown of the Gulf Stream, once seen as a "low probability event", was
now
> 45 per cent likely this century, and 70 per cent probable by 2200. If it
comes
> sooner rather than later it will be catastrophic for Britain and northern
> Europe, giving us a climate like Labrador (which shares our latitude) even
as
> the rest of the world heats up: if it comes later it could be beneficial,
> moderating the worst of the warming.
>
> The experts at Exeter were virtually unanimous about the danger, mirroring
the
> attitude of the climate science community as a whole: humanity is to
blame.
> There were a few skeptics at Exeter, including Andrei Illarionov, an
adviser
> to Russia's President Putin, who last year called the Kyoto Protocol "an
> interstate Auschwitz". But in truth it is much easier to find skeptics
among
> media pundits in London or neo-cons in Washington than among climate
> scientists. Even the few contrarian climatalogists publish little research
to
> support their views, concentrating on questioning the work of others.
>
> Now a new scientific consensus is emerging - that the warming must be kept
> below an average increase of two degrees centigrade if catastrophe is to
be
> avoided. This almost certainly involves keeping concentrations of carbon
> dioxide, the main cause of climate change, below 400 parts per million.
>
> Unfortunately we are almost there, with concentrations exceeding 370ppm
and
> rising, but experts at the conference concluded that we could go briefly
above
> the danger level so long as we brought it down rapidly afterwards. They
added
> that this would involve the world reducing emissions by 50 per cent by
2050 -
> and rich countries cutting theirs by 30 per cent by 2020.
>
> Economists stressed there is little time for delay. If action is put off
for a
> decade, it will need to be twice as radical; if it has to wait 20 years,
it
> will cost between three and seven times as much.
>
> The good news is that it can be done with existing technology, by cutting
> energy waste, expanding the use of renewable sources, growing trees and
crops
> (which remove carbon dioxide from the air) to turn into fuel, capturing
the
> gas before it is released from power stations, and - maybe - using more
> nuclear energy.
>
> The better news is that it would not cost much: one estimate suggested the
> cost would be about 1 per cent of Europe's GNP spread over 20 years;
another
> suggested it meant postponing an expected fivefold increase in world
wealth by
> just two years. Many experts believe combating global warming would
increase
> prosperity, by bringing in new technologies.
>
> The big question is whether governments will act. President Bush's
opposition
> to international action remains the greatest obstacle. Tony Blair, by
almost
> universal agreement, remains the leader with the best chance of persuading
him
> to change his mind.
>
> But so far the Prime Minister has been more influenced by the President
than
> the other way round. He appears to be moving away from fighting for the
> pollution reductions needed in favor of agreeing on a vague pledge to
bring in
> new technologies sometime in the future.
>
> By then it will be too late. And our children and grandchildren will
wonder -
> as we do in surveying, for example, the drift into the First World War -
"how
> on earth could they be so blind?"
>
> WATER WARS
>
> What could happen? Wars break out over diminishing water resources as
> populations grow and rains fail.
>
> How would this come about? Over 25 per cent more people than at present
are
> expected to live in countries where water is scarce in the future, and
global
> warming will make it worse.
>
> How likely is it? Former UN chief Boutros Boutros-Ghali has long said that
the
> next Middle East war will be fought for water, not oil.
>
> DISAPPEARING NATIONS
>
> What could happen? Low-lying island such as the Maldives and Tuvalu - with
> highest points only a few feet above sea-level - will disappear off the
face
> of the Earth.
>
> How would this come about? As the world heats up, sea levels are rising,
> partly because glaciers are melting, and partly because the water in the
> oceans expands as it gets warmer.
>
> How likely is it? Inevitable. Even if global warming stopped today, the
seas
> would continue to rise for centuries. Some small islands have already sunk
for
> ever. A year ago, Tuvalu was briefly submerged.
>
> FLOODING
>
> What could happen? London, New York, Tokyo, Bombay, many other cities and
vast
> areas of countries from Britain to Bangladesh disappear under tens of feet
of
> water, as the seas rise dramatically.
>
> How would this come about? Ice caps in Greenland and Antarctica melt. The
> Greenland ice sheet would raise sea levels by more than 20ft, the West
> Antarctic ice sheet by another 15ft.
>
> How likely is it? Scientists used to think it unlikely, but this year
reported
> that the melting of both ice caps had begun. It will take hundreds of
years,
> however, for the seas to rise that much.
>
> UNINHABITABLE EARTH
>
> What could happen? Global warming escalates to the point where the world's
> whole climate abruptly switches, turning it permanently into a much hotter
and
> less hospitable planet.
>
> How would this come about? A process involving "positive feedback" causes
the
> warming to fuel itself, until it reaches a point that finally tips the
climate
> pattern over.
>
> How likely is it? Abrupt flips have happened in the prehistoric past.
> Scientists believe this is unlikely, at least in the foreseeable future,
but
> increasingly they are refusing to rule it out.
>
> RAINFOREST FIRES
>
> What could happen? Famously wet tropical forests, such as those in the
Amazon,
> go up in flames, destroying the world's richest wildlife habitats and
> releasing vast amounts of carbon dioxide to speed global warming.
>
> How would this come about? Britain's Met Office predicted in 1999 that
much of
> the Amazon will dry out and die within 50 years, making it ready for
sparks -
> from humans or lightning - to set it ablaze.
>
> How likely is it? Very, if the predictions turn out to be right. Already
there
> have been massive forest fires in Borneo and Amazonia, casting palls of hi
ghly
> polluting smoke over vast areas.
>
> THE BIG FREEZE
>
> What could happen? Britain and northern Europe get much colder because the
> Gulf Stream, which provides as much heat as the sun in winter, fails.
>
> How would this come about? Melting polar ice sends fresh water into the
North
> Atlantic. The less salty water fails to generate the underwater current
which
> the Gulf Stream needs.
>
> How likely is it? About evens for a Gulf Steam failure this century, said
> scientists last week.
>
> STARVATION
>
> What could happen? Food production collapses in Africa, for example, as
> rainfall dries up and droughts increase. As farmland turns to desert,
people
> flee in their millions in search of food.
>
> How would this come about? Rainfall is expected to decrease by up to 60
per
> cent in winter and 30 per cent in summer in southern Africa this century.
By
> some estimates, Zambia could lose almost all its farms.
>
> How likely is it? Pretty likely unless the world tackles both global
warming
> and Africa's decline. Scientists agree that droughts will increase in a
warmer
> world.
>
> ACID OCEANS
>
> What could happen? The seas will gradually turn more and more acid. Coral
> reefs, shellfish and plankton, on which all life depends, will die off.
Much
> of the life of the oceans will become extinct.
>
> How would this come about? The oceans have absorbed half the carbon
dioxide,
> the main cause of global warming, so far emitted by humanity. This forms
> dilute carbonic acid, which attacks corals and shells.
>
> How likely is it? It is already starting. Scientists warn that the
chemistry
> of the oceans is changing in ways unprecedented for 20 million years. Some
> predict that the world's coral reefs will die within 35 years.
>
> DISEASE
>
> What could happen? Malaria - which kills two million people worldwide
every
> year - reaches Britain with foreign travelers, gets picked up by British
> mosquitos and becomes endemic in the warmer climate.
>
> How would this come about? Four of our 40 mosquito species can carry the
> disease, and hundreds of travelers return with it annually. The insects
breed
> faster, and feed more, in warmer temperatures.
>
> How likely is it? A Department of Health study has suggested it may happen
by
> 2050: the Environment Agency has mentioned 2020. Some experts say it is
> miraculous that it has not happened already.
>
> HURRICANES
>
> What could happen? Hurricanes, typhoons and violent storms proliferate,
grow
> even fiercer, and hit new areas. Last September's repeated battering of
> Florida and the Caribbean may be just a foretaste of what is to come, say
> scientists.
>
> How would this come about? The storms gather their energy from warm seas,
and
> so, as oceans heat up, fiercer ones occur and threaten areas where at
present
> the seas are too cool for such weather.
>
> How likely is it? Scientists are divided over whether storms will get more
> frequent and whether the process has already begun.
>
> © 2005 Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.
>
> ----------
>
> Also in Environment by the lndependent/UK
> Greenhouse gas 'threatens marine life'
> The ultimate high-pressure job: surviving on the seabed
> Global warming: scientists reveal timetable
> Dramatic change in West Antarctic ice could produce
>
> For original posting with above links, see:
> http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/story.jsp?story=608209
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
>
> For more Flyby News resources, see:
> The Mounting Evidence of Global Warming!!!.
>
http://www.flybynews.com/cgi-local/newspro/viewnews.cgi?newsid1014396414,102
78
> ,
>
> For information on a technology to reduce CO2 pollution emissions, see:
> STIRLING Solution for Onsite Power Production
>
http://www.flybynews.com/cgi-local/newspro/viewnews.cgi?newsid1019075905,598
98
> ,m
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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