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Climate Crisis Will Be the Challenge of New Decade
This is not how it was supposed to end. Internationally, this decade was supposed to give us a comprehensive global treaty to contain climate change. In Ireland, some of us allowed ourselves hope that a soft-landing for the Celtic Tiger would herald a “post-materialist” era where environmental and social considerations were given as much weight as economic ones in policymaking.
Instead, the Copenhagen climate talks ended in confusion and recrimination and in Ireland the economic crash has driven us back to very understandable materialist concerns about budget cuts and job losses.
The coming decade will see whether humanity is capable of overcoming a complex web of environmental problems that pose an existential threat to civilisation. Climate, the most urgent and most mainstream of these problems, epitomises the challenges.
Politicians and scientists agree we must limit global warming to less than two degrees Celsius to prevent runaway climate change. Current pollution trends put us on a path to six degrees of warming this century, when four degrees or more would trigger the breakdown of civilisation as we know it. To be closer to two degrees than four we need to make global emissions start to decline before 2020.
That is the challenge of the decade. When we are writing our reviews of the 2010s there will be no more telling benchmark of human progress. Are global greenhouse gas emissions lower in 2019 than they are now? Put another way, will we choose survival? To answer this most basic question successfully humankind will have to answer two subsidiary questions, one evolutionary, one political.
As a species are we evolved to tackle a threat like climate change? It doesn’t seem to trigger our fight-or-flight reflex in a meaningful way. For most of us it seems remote and abstract. The gases that cause it are invisible. And the ultimate source of the threat is not external – it is us, our current lifestyles, our historical choices and our future aspirations.
However unwittingly, we are the root of the problem, and therefore the solution. If an army were massing on our borders, if an asteroid were hurtling towards Earth, no one would question the need to act. But as we set fire to the only home humanity has ever known, we struggle to perceive the threat and have so far failed to act decisively.
The second question is a practical, political one. Can an international system of 192 nation states solve a global problem? The lesson of Copenhagen is no, at least not if we cling to our traditional approach to interstate negotiating, where short-term national advantage trumps long-term public interest.
It is the tragedy of the commons writ large. For the vested interests in each state it makes sense for their country to keep polluting as much as possible and national negotiators act on that basis. Given the limited capacity of our common atmosphere to absorb that pollution, however, this approach will prove disastrous for humanity as a whole.
As the decade progresses there are three signs that would indicate we are moving beyond this “mutual assured destruction” approach to climate change. We need to see all three.
First, are any of the players acting unilaterally to cut their emissions, against their perceived short-term interests? The obvious candidate is the European Union, itself a unique political formation where national sovereignty is pooled and co-operation has replaced competition in crucial areas. The EU has made a unilateral commitment to action on climate change, but it is a weak one. When you account for the caveats and the loopholes it adds up to less than half our fair share. So, will we see EU climate policy start to reflect the union’s pioneering nature? Will the EU move to cut its emissions by 40 per cent by 2020, in line with the science?
The union could act on the courage of its convictions. Those advocating the abolition of slavery did not say they would only free half their slaves until their competitors freed theirs. The EU could also act based on its long-term economic interest. A low-carbon economy will build energy security, resilience and sustainable jobs for the rest of the century.
China is acting to limit its future emissions, despite its determination not to be legally bound to do so. And the US is moving too, faster at state and company level than federal level. If the early years of this decade see these players significantly limit their emissions it will be both a sign of hope and an international confidence-building measure.
Second, will the emerging transnational forces gain the strength and focus to push nation states towards a global deal? The run-in to Copenhagen saw supranational civil society coalition-building reach new heights, with the likes of 350.org, Avaaz and the tcktcktck campaign mobilising hundreds of thousands of people across the world. Friends of the Earth alone had 500 activists in Copenhagen, representing our two million supporters across 77 countries. On the business side, lobbyists for polluting interests still hold the upper hand – but this time more than 500 transnational corporations signed a Copenhagen communique most of which could just as easily have been written by non-governmental organisation campaigners.
Third, will our governments manage to agree a new treaty that provides a global framework for action and “mutual assured survival” rather than destruction? This is the key test. Can we lift our eyes to the horizon long enough to put aside short-term national advantage? This past decade there has been much talk of the G8, the G20 and now the G2, China and the US. But the new treaty must institutionalise the G1: humanity, and our common cause to protect the only ecosystem that supports our existence.
The coming decade will require you to decide where you stand, and soon.
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27 Comments so far
Show AllAs long as the Corporatist-Militarist Party rules this nation and most of the planet, the Climate Crisis will only increase.
Corporate persons are now more valuable as well as more powerful than humans.
With the MIC in control the answer is never. But civilian control of government, that answers to the will of the people -- once stirred up -- offers a possible out. We can but hope and work toward such a goal -- not just throw up our hands and gripe.
Gary
The government of the USA can't even perceive reality, much less respond to it. As long as it exists, it will be an impediment to progress, even to survival.
Total economic collapse is the only hope. Kill Wall Street. We can survive without it. With it, no way.
Preventing the climate crisis was the challenge of the LAST decade.
Preparing for the worst is the challenge of the new decade.
The worst looks to be so bad that no preparations can stave it off. A huge human die off looks like the most likely outcome. Unless some charismatic global leader can emerge to unite the warring clans -- you know, someone who actuaually is what Obama appeared to be for awhile during the campaign, someone who can one-up all religions and tribal and national loyalties and get it through to everybody -- even the greedy rich -- that we're all in a rapidly leaking boat together, that steerage and the first class cabins with luxury accommodations are sinking at an equal rate, that the only faint smidgen of hope is to have everyone plugging holes and patching as fast as they can with no thought to personal advantage.
This far fetched hopelessly idealistic notion is, in my rarely humble view, the only thing that can keep the real future from trumping every big disaster movie made these last decades.
I have no nomiations for a candidate nor any sure fire way of distringuishing the real thing, should there be one, from a stylish charlatan.
Will we make it even as far as they Mayan sell-by date of December 21, 2012?
In the coming decade the decline of the US empire will continue, but don't count on that to save the biosphere. The fossil-fuel and auto industries are independent of any regime. In your own city or town, you can implement free public transport for about 60 basis points of tax. Don't wait for world leaders. For more, search #freepubtrans on twitter.
There is NO climate crisis.
The crisis would be paying a tax to breathe.
The climate scientists have it right, I am afraid.
Now exploding in the sky are the deadly fossil fuel mines we have made.
These may be quicker than our population is choking Gaia with crowds.
Much longer lasting than human empires are Gaia's heat absorbing funeral shrouds.
Still our mother Gaia fights on to absorb the insults of our human greenhouse jokes.
The ocean shell creatures die as the water becomes acid with carbon soaks.
Land surviving animals hurry in directions polar or go higher seeking cooler climes.
Those that can still find living space not already ruined by human kinds.
Nearer the poles once impregnable fortresses of ice now shrink, shatter and pour,
Hidden sluices and streams now rage under ice sheet floor.
The poles shall both melt and join the oceans warmth expanding still more.
Our cities that stand by the seas shall be washed far beyond the shore.
Gaias oceans are the hidden weapons of mass destruction that trigger with heat.
Composted for millions of ages, iced methyl hydrates lie beneath the oceans feet.
Always bured along the continental shelves by continued organic decay.
They await the warming wake up call, for when Gaia has need of billions to slay.
Each methane molecule heat bomb is primed and dangerous being eighty times more powerful.
Than the waste gas from fossil fuels we stole from the Gaia climate control burial.
They are guaranteed to outdo even our criminal heat gas spike.
Their mass effect will rid this world of higher species with a clean wipe.
So for Gaia the burning of fossil fuels is a Capital higher species crime.
All humanity is now waiting on death row, and there can be no repeal in time.
Unless we absolutely repent now, and stop all coal burning at once.
We will trigger our own execution, by heat death, as befits a sociopathic species dunce.
I agree with the above comment about the last decade being the time for saving the climate-this next, is for getting ready -for a nightmare.
UNLESS -We stop eeverything now... AS much as possible which is a hell of a lot-coal burning, using half the electricity or even less. The only thing we should be doing is keeping hospitals open and working on solar and wind -geothermal etc. Oh AND NO MORE CAPITALISM!!!!!1!!!!!1
There is still hope.
A lot of people in a position to "do something big" are still paralyzed by the fading hope that the climate scientists might actually be wrong, that maybe the North Atlantic Oscillation really *was* warming the planet for a few decades, and now it will cool. That maybe the sun really *was* cooler in the beginning of the century, before it was studied precisely by satellites and CCD telescopes with computers. That maybe something, somewhere was overlooked, and it will all turn out to be a bad dream, and the Arctic Ice will start to thicken and increase in area some summer soon, for 5 or 10 years in a row.
They are hoping for a Hail Mary pass thrown by Jesus, or something; a big volcano that buys them another decade or two of stall time, or an unexpected solar "minimum", or maybe some Republican staffer somewhere finds a math error in one of the climate models...
I think in the next 10 years, most of these fading hopes will turn to resignation that they have to do something (or maybe the holdouts will just wait to die, and leave it for the next generation).
The scientists say we should start cutting emissions NOW, for the least painful solution.
But the global will is not there, yet.
So, it's PAINFUL solutions that will be left.
Within 10 years, it will be plain to all the more or less serious people that have been deluding themselves up until now (the idiots, of course, will never learn) that the actions of 6.7 billion humans are warming the planet, and with the positive feedback tipping points, we might reach Civilization-ending temperatures within this century (not a fireball of death, of course, but the end of glacier fed rivers for much of India and China, the movement of agriculture zones faster than industrial farming can respond to, new drought zones that make existing cities untenable, resource wars for declining fresh water and food that the climate change is causing, coastal flooding of huge cities around the planet, etc... THAT's what Civilization-ending means)
THEN, the planet will spring into action. By 2020, 2025 at the latest.
Of course, by then, the solutions will be much more painful. More drastic. More desperate.
But I think there might still be solutions up until 15 years from now.
If people are still waffling by then, kiss your descendants goodbye.
What scares me is that nations such as Bangladesh are very vulnerable to sea level rise. Look at a map, East are jungles, north and west India, and south the Bay of Bengal. Now, give the sea level rise 2 meters. Bangladeshes' population has to move to India. That's 133,376,684 people as of 2002. The Indians have nukes and their army isn't that big. Draw your own conclusions. Me, I'm investing in lead underwear.
I live in a state that a friend once described as, "present your life-time NRA membership card at the border to get in." The local paper ran a straw poll and the majority believed that man-caused global warming was either overstated or a total hoax. That being said there are a few of us who are trying to raise the public consciousness. What's funny is that the lake I live on is a superfund site from mine tailings. They don't believe in that either.
Don't feel too bad; thinking climate change is either overstated or a hoax requires some modicum of thought--at least they're not attributing it to god and expecting sky-daddy jr. to show up at the last minute and save the day.
There's a reinforced wall of ignorance and delusional thinking that will have to come down before there will be any light at the end of this tunnel. I have very little hope for humankind, myself. We had it made but it just wasn't enough. We really blew it.
I grew up with NRA folk who could have written "Nationalism" where questionnaires asked about religion.
They made plenty of jokes about duck hunters being required to fund hiding places for the ducks. Politically, as a group and despite exceptions, they were fascists with libertarian catchphrases that they thought came from Washington and Jefferson.
You have an uphill battle.
But, to speak very broadly about a diverse group of people, they may quicken to the issues of preserving their hobbies more quickly than they do to the welfare of people they distant from or disdained by. That often means almost anyone they do not know: including not only most all manner of foreigners, but also people who live by the ocean, or in "California, New York, and Boston" or some similar construction.
Some of these people have contributed real money to wetlands preservation and similar issues over the years. At some point, the connection is there to be made.
IF you want to be a part of the SOLUTION instead of the problem, SUBSTITUTE healthy proteins for animal products.
51% Greenhouse Gases are attributable to livestock products per studies by Robert Goodland and Jeff Anhang.
Please be part of the solution.
For more information see www.worldwatch.org/ww/livestock.
Whenever there are as many people involved as there are in the climate change debate nothing will be decided. Only a set of compromises can possibly result by definition. From what I’ve read it seems that no-one has yet applied sufficient time analysing not only how to start to correct (stay within 2 degrees) climate heating but also how to get all countries pulling in the same direction. I’ve got an idea. If a systems analyst had a mass of interdependent variables he/she would have to look for a common thread, one which encompassed some maximum number of variations in those variables. This thread would have to be as simple as possible to enable the fastest take-up. From that point the individual variances would be diminished so the problem would shrink in complexity, at the same time there would be a reference established for others to work with.
Forgetting what some might refer to as gobbledegook (the spell checker accepted this), what in my opinion is the common thread to a solution to GH is the humble generator. If we could somehow get the generator to accept less energy in than it does at the moment we start to win the battle. I can do this; it’s tested, documented and lodged at the UK IPO. When Mr Edison developed the generator, he didn’t have semiconductors to help him out. Only since 1970 (or thereabouts) could this have been done commercially. Anyone interested ?
Climate change has happened before. It will happen again.
Why is it so hard to understand that this has nothing to do with mankind?
Human activity has effected the climate on this planet in the past. There is no reason to assume human activity can't speed up a natural process that would happen over centuries rather than decades, allowing humans to adapt to the changing conditions. Why is it so hard for you to understand that everything on this planet is interconnected and dependent upon its atmosphere, and that human activity is changing that atmosphere? The very idea we could get away with the wholesale pollution of this planet indefinitely without negative consequences is illogical and borders on magical thinking.
Having one cause for a large category of events does not preclude others.
Here's how I look at it.............mother nature took hundreds of millions of years to make oil by taking carbon out of the atmosphere with vegetation that got buried. We humans have taken that carbon and put a significant portion of it back into the atmosphere in a couple of centuries. How could there not be some kind of effect?
Water is essential to human life right? If you drink a few glasses a day you survive nicely. What would happen if you suddenly drank 10 gallons of water? I think there would be some serious reaction from your body.
Forests have grown and died before humans were around.
That doesn't mean 6.7 billion humans couldn't obliterate a forest in 10 years.
Why is it so hard to understand that mankind can affect a planet 7900 miles in diameter ?
Of course the climate would continue to change if humans were not here; it has changed a lot during the last 4.6 billion years. But digging up billions of tonnes of carbon from the Earth and burning it every year is definitely changing the atmosphere from what it would otherwise be, increasing the greenhouse gases, affecting the flow of infrared radiation out to space. Humans are causing the planet to warm very quickly (compared to processes like longterm increase in solar total irradiance, continental drift affecting ocean patterns, Milankovitch cycles, etc)
Deal with it.
Does anyone by chance know how much of the CO2 emitted is retained in the air? I can't find a real answer.
Of the 26.4 gigatonnes of CO2 emitted by humans per year, about 43% of that stays in the atmosphere, with the rest being absorbed by carbon sinks.
http://www.skepticalscience.com/
Is-the-airborne-fraction-of-anthropogenic-CO2-emissions-increasing.html
(carbon sinks, like the oceans and extra tundra plants, can saturate and absorb less CO2 in the future - this could make the human emitted CO2 accumulate faster in the atmosphere, warming the planet faster. That is, we have been spared the consequences of a lot of CO2 emissions so far, but the sinks are filling up...)
Thanks very much! Much appreciated.
Part of my own wild theory from another post:
I think "hot" is what happens when undersea volcanism kicks in due to the following cascade:
Rising heat, from either or both anthro and natural biological results of this long interglacial, eventually melts most of the land-borne ice;
This flows into the ocean as liquid. Because the earth rotates, there is a long term change in the location of water mass and the physical forces associated with spinning mass. There is a gross change and a net change, but the essence is that forces on the tectonic plates change, magma flows at plate boundaries, tsunamis release some methane clathrates, some volcanoes pop off, and we get a 2-3 degree spike of heat into the oceans and atmosphere which trigger the massive weather mechanism that replaces the water mass to the poles.
I've posted this for 2 years and not gotten a lot of positive feedback...but I'm just trying to connect the dots and fill in where there are obvious blanks in the public conversation and scientific consensus (which, like political consensus, looks a bit like sausage).
I've gotten bits of info from "The Great Iceage", by Drury and Chapman, where some effects of water mass are mentioned. From "Under a Green Sky", paleo-archeologic evidences of sudden climate changes. And others, but most of this, one can deduce from the IPCC/Gore chart of CO2/temp deviation from mean, that is widely available in Gore’s book.
The chart shows a clock work-type mechanism of climate change.
##Other bits fit in---like : (for comparison) the average runway length at a big airport is 10,000ft long (most of us have seen one from an airplane)...1/2 the mass of the atmosphere is at or below 2 lengths...most weather happens w/in 3 lengths...the temp at 4 lengths up is a constant -54C. On a clear day from a hill or building you can see 10 miles (52,000ft). Your Walmart is about 5 miles away.... That's why there's such a difference between the choice of a Hummer v a Prius, and coal v solar, and why we need to get our act together as a species.
Our margins are thin.
The idea that cutting carbon dioxide emissions will raise temperatures catastrophically is absurd. Even if we could burn all the accessible fossil fuels, the atmospheric CO2 concentration would not exceed 750 ppm (cf ~390 ppm today). On several occasions in the past CO2 concentrations exceeded 2,000 ppm yet there was no "thermal runaway" and Ice Ages still happened.
Recent research has improved the resolution of time measurements to such an extent that we know CO2 concentrations rise about 600 years AFTER the end of each Ice Age. This is an example of global warming driving CO2 levels; so far nobody has found a precedent for the idea that CO2 drives global warming.
Climate change is primarily a natural phenomenon and it is hubris for mankind to imagine that we can control it.
If mankind could affect global climate our objective should be to raise temperatures as much as possible with the aim of increasing the growing season at high latitudes, a sure recipe for increased prosperity for plants and animals.
If we could raise temperatures by more than 5 degrees the climate might resemble the Eocene when there were no ice caps at either pole and sea levels were more than 200 feet higher than today. Vegetation extended from pole to pole. During the Eocene, mammals became dominant leading in due course to the Ascent of Man.