Thursday, June 12, 2014

Taking Climate Change Seriously


Global warming is the world’s most serious and urgent threat, and stopping it must become our top priority. If you think that any other issue is more important or urgent, please keep reading. The urgency and danger aren’t separate, but I will alternate my focus between them and try to put this issue into perspective. 

Urgency: A few years ago, most nations agreed that we need to limit warming to 2 degrees C above late-1800 levels. But there is strong evidence that is much too high. I will show why later, but for now, assume that we should try to limit warming to about 1 degree. James Hansen and an international team of scientists came out with a paper in December 2013 that shows what it might take.1

The charts below are from page 8 of this paper. Currently CO2 emissions are rising about 2% per year, and you can see how steeply the level of CO2 in the atmosphere is rising. The charts show how CO2 levels would change if we reduced emissions beginning in 2013 (left chart) or later (right chart).


We need to get CO2 levels below the horizontal dotted line (350 ppm). The longer they are above that level, and the higher the peak lever, the riskier our situation becomes. Notice how much longer it takes if we wait before reducing emissions, or if we reduce them by a smaller amount. If we start immediately and reduce worldwide emissions by 6% per year, we would be under the dotted line in around 100 years. If we wait until 2020 and reduce by 5% per year, it would take about 300 years to get CO2 to safe levels. A 7 year delay and 17%  smaller reduction level triples the amount of time it takes! On the other hand, if we had begun in 2005, a 3.5% reduction per year would have brought us to safe levels by 2100. If we had started only 15 years earlier, 40% smaller reductions would have gotten us there in 200 years less time! (See p. 10 of the Hansen paper for more details.) This why the problem is so urgent. Any delay is extremely foolish, because it makes the job much more difficult and makes our future much more dangerous.
This paper assumes that in addition to reducing emissions, we will store 100 GtC (gigatons of carbon) in plants and the soil by 2100. That means stopping deforestation, reforesting much of the land we have deforested, and implementing farming techniques that put carbon into the soil. If we only put 50 GtC back, we would have to reduce emissions by 9% per year beginning now in order to get to safe levels by 2100. (The paper didn’t state this, but I suppose that if we don’t put any carbon back in the ground, reductions would have to be roughly 12% per year.)
The paper also assumes that we will simultaneously reduce methane and other greenhouse gases in order to counteract the reduction in particles that have a cooling effect (which will be reduced as we burn less fossil fuel). Doing all this will be a huge task, but to not do it would be insane.
Danger: As I will show below, harmful effects multiply quickly as temperature rises more than 1 degree. But even keeping the warming to 1 degree would not save us from all the bad consequences. With only 0.8 degrees of warming so far, we are already seeing many effects2, including these:
·         Increased weather extremes (droughts, storms, fires, etc.) have caused property damage, loss of life and crops, higher food prices, and economic damage.
·         Increased destruction of forests by fire and pests has caused economic and ecosystem damage.
·         Diseases have spread to new locations.
·         Sea level rise has caused erosion of coastlines and worse flooding.
·         Melting permafrost has caused damage to buildings and infrastructure.
·         Bleaching and die-off of corals has increased dramatically.
·         Rising ocean acidity has begun to threaten some species and harmed shellfish industries.
·         The already very high extinction rate has increased.
·         Some areas have experienced water shortages caused by shrinking glaciers and snowpack.
·         Expanding deserts and rising food costs have caused or exacerbated conflicts and unrest.
·         Feedbacks with huge potential have already started happening. (Melting permafrost and thawing methane hydrates on ocean floors release more greenhouse gases.)

The effects of warming do not all come immediately. Feedbacks can take decades or more to have their full effect. About 90% of the extra heat has warmed the oceans, and it takes roughly 1,000 years for water to complete the full ocean journey along the global conveyor belt3, so it will be a long time before the warming is fully distributed. Even if surface air temperatures remained where they are now:

·         Arctic sea ice would continue to melt, eventually making the Arctic Ocean ice-free for part of the year.
·         Glaciers would continue to melt, and many of them would disappear.
·         Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets would continue to melt (and sea levels rise), for decades to centuries.
·         As ocean floors gradually warm, more methane will be released, causing more warming.

But surface temperatures won’t remain where they are unless we dramatically lower atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases. We have probably seen less than half the warming that current CO2 levels would eventually cause, even without feedbacks that cause greenhouse gas levels to rise further. Temperatures will go up for even longer, because of the huge momentum of the climate system. And as the last bullet point above indicates, feedbacks will take CO2 and methane levels even higher. Besides the things above getting worse, predictions for only a little more warming include these:

·         Sea level will rise high enough to flood many lower elevation islands and coastal areas
·         Areas experiencing droughts will increase, possibly by a factor of ten
·         Melting glaciers will cause floods and later droughts for millions of people and their crops
·         Droughts that last up to 5-6 decades each could occur in the U.S. Southwest
·         The Great Plains could turn into a desert

You might think that you would be fine as long as you didn’t live in one of the affected areas, but these things will have wide repercussions. Several of the above items would cause severe local food shortages, and because our food supply is increasingly globalized, they will affect food prices all over the world. There are already millions of hungry or malnourished people. Many more are just getting by. Higher food prices plus a shortage of food will mean millions more in hunger and poverty. Farmers in affected areas will lose their means of livelihood, as will those whose livelihoods are closely connected to those farmers. Worse disasters will cause more climate refugees, who won’t be able to buy products either. Most people will have to cut back on non-essential spending because of high food prices. That will mean layoffs and businesses closing in non-food industries too. This is guaranteed to have a negative effect on local economies and the global economy. Governments will strain to take care of growing numbers of people in need at the same time as tax revenues are falling.

Although the last two items in the list above are not certain to happen with 1 degree of warming, they both happened only a few hundred years ago, during the Medieval Warm Period (MWP), when global temperatures were probably slightly cooler than now. A paper by NOAA published in Science in 2004 concluded that the drought in the Western US at that time was similar to, but not as severe as the MWP droughts between 900 and 1300. It also predicted that droughts would intensify with more warming. A 2011 paper said the same area suffered much worse droughts in previous inter-glacials, when global temperatures were hotter. Some of these droughts lasted for over a thousand years.4 In other words, the hotter it gets, the more likely devastating droughts in this area become.

To delve a little deeper into these last two effects, think about what would happen if mega-droughts hit the U.S. Southwest. California, which currently grows roughly half of the country’s vegetables, nuts, and fruits5, would no longer be able to grow this food. Its economy (one of the largest in the world if it were a country) would be devastated, which would affect the U.S. and world economies. It would also cause the U.S. to rely heavily on imported food, which would cause food prices to rise worldwide. People would have to move out of California for economic and other reasons. Now imagine what would happen if, on top of that, the Great Plains turned into a desert. Instead of exporting grains and meat, we would have to import these too. The national and global economic consequences would be extremely bad. And this would not be a temporary crisis like the 2008 recession, because effects like these would last at least decades, probably centuries. Many other predicted effects would also reduce the food supply, and the combination of several of them would be catastrophic.

Perspective: Governments need to deal with many complex problems and prioritize issues based on many factors. The Obama administration’s “all of the above” energy strategy shows that short term “energy security” was seen as more important than stopping global warming. That makes no sense when you know what global warming could bring even with much more aggressive, worldwide emissions reductions than governments are considering. Green energy would give us both short and long term energy security, so it makes no sense at all to drill more oil, mine more coal, or refine more tar sands oil. The reasoning may have been that fossil fuels are cheaper, but they are cheaper only because we don’t include even the costs of their immediate adverse effects (including over a million deaths per year from pollution), much less the future effects of climate change.

Urgency 2: For years scientists have estimated that a doubling of CO2 would eventually cause global temperatures to rise 1.5 – 5 degrees C. This is the “climate sensitivity” of this gas. The paper above assumes CO2 sensitivity is 3 degrees C, near the center of this range. But a newer paper5 concluded that the possible sensitivity range is really 3 – 5 degrees. This would put the center of the range at 4 degrees, and that would move the dotted line to 330 ppm. If sensitivity turns out to be 5 degrees, then we would need to get CO2 levels below 318 ppm.

I added two more dotted lines to the charts below for these two sensitivities. I also extended the timeline a few hundred years on the chart on the right. You can see that if sensitivity is 4 degrees, the blue line would get us to safe atmospheric CO2 levels roughly 800 years from now instead of 300. And if sensitivity is 5 degrees, it will be hundreds of years beyond that before we are in the safe zone.


If sensitivity is 3 degrees, then 450 ppm would eventually bring us to 2 degrees of warming. But if sensitivity is 4 degrees, it would only take 405 ppm, and if it’s 5 degrees, it would only take 378 ppm. If we follow the blue line, we will be higher than 405 ppm for about 50 years and higher than 378 ppm for about 150 years. Even the solid black line on the left would keep us above 378 ppm for decades. In other words, we are probably already in very dangerous territory, and are definitely taking huge risks.

Danger 2: The effects of 2 degrees of warming are much more than twice as bad as the effects of 1 degree. Not only do the effects listed above get much worse, new effects will appear, including the following. (When I say “will”, assume that means “probably will”. Nothing is certain, but most of these will probably happen.):

·         The permafrost boundary will move hundreds of miles north, releasing CO2 and methane as it melts.
·         We will lose the majority of coral reefs and species that depend on them.
·         The oceans will be too acidic for the formation of some shells, imperiling shellfish, plankton, and the many species that depend on them.
·         The average summer will be hotter than 2003, when a heat wave killed tens of thousands of Europeans.
·         In China, shifting monsoons will bring widespread drought and food shortages.
·         India will see decreases in wheat and rice production and large scale die-offs of forests.
·         Food shortages will be common and food prices will soar in lean years.
·         Widespread conflicts seem very likely.
·         Flooding and fires will increase in many parts of the world.
·         Greenland will eventually lose much of its ice, forcing as much as half of humanity to move to higher ground.
·         The earth’s largest carbon source, the oceans, may absorb much less CO2, and a plankton die-off would also cause much less CO2 to be sequestered.

Perspective 2: If Obama had made dealing with climate change his top priority, he probably could have gotten something passed during his first 2 years. It may have been as imperfect as the health insurance reform he chose to focus on, but it would have been a beginning. Thousands were suffering and dying each year in the U.S. from lack of health insurance, so it was an urgent problem. But thousands are already dying each year worldwide from climate change. And unless you ignore the future, stopping global warming is much more important. When some of the effects above begin, deaths caused by climate changes will far outnumber the lives saved by the Affordable Care Act. In fact, the good done by the ACA will be fleeting if we don’t stop global warming soon enough. Think about what will happen when the huge negative economic effects happen. People who lose their jobs will need government assistance to pay their health insurance. But how will the government pay when tax revenue has fallen sharply? The answer is they won’t. There will be many more people without health care than before the ACA. And this won’t be a temporary setback. The climate will take at least hundreds to thousands of years to get back to normal. If Obama and other U.S. leaders had put things into perspective, they would have tackled climate change first.

Urgency 3: The Hansen paper talks about “slow feedbacks”, which might better be called “delayed” feedbacks. They are called “slow” because they don’t begin right away. But once they get going they can grow huge quickly. These large feedbacks are not included in climate sensitivity estimates. That means they are also not included in the chart above. Virtually all the predictions pretend like they don’t exist. Models don’t take them into account. But they do exist. The paper says that they probably won’t occur with 1 degree of warming but probably will with 2 degrees, and when they do occur, they will probably cause global temperature to rise an additional 1 to 2 degrees. This makes it even more important to keep global warming to 1 degree, because 2 degrees will probably become 3 to 4 degrees.

These feedbacks have already begun, but hopefully on a small scale. I say “hopefully” because we don’t yet have enough data to know how quickly they are growing. Melting permafrost that releases CO2 and methane is one of these feedbacks. Another is the melting of methane hydrates in shallow ocean waters. A few years ago scientists predicted that with 3 - 4 degrees of warming, the Amazon would begin to release carbon instead of absorbing it, as it turned into a savannah. A study came out a couple of years ago saying that although the Amazon rainforest used to absorb on average about as much CO2 as the US released each  year, in the 10 year period before the report came out, it released as much as it absorbed. This was due to two large droughts. This makes it look like the Amazon could become a source of carbon instead of a sink sooner than predicted. Whenever it happens, it would raise global temperatures by about 1 degree more. If all that isn’t enough, another recent paper6 concluded that if warming reaches 4 degrees, the “vegetation carbon sink” would end. That means plants will no longer remove CO2 from the atmosphere. This would make the CO2 levels stay high for a much longer time, especially with oceans absorbing less CO2 (which is also predicted to happen). If we let things go this far, the effects would probably last many thousands of years.

Danger 3: Since 2 degrees of warming is likely to turn into 3 - 4 degrees even with no additional human emissions, you should assume at least some of the following predictions could be listed under 2 degrees. In addition to previously listed effects becoming stronger:

·         Snow caps in the Alps will all but disappear.
·         Heat waves like those in the summer of 2003 will become the norm.
·         Monsoons will become more variable, flooding more or raining less.
·         There will be perennial drought and famine in much of southern Africa. Botswana may be entirely covered by shifting sand dunes.
·         The Indus, which is practically the only source of water for Pakistan and part of India, will be dry for months of the year. Other rivers fed by Himalayan glaciers and supplying water to millions in China, India, and other countries will produce much less water.
·         New York City will have 100 year floods every few years.
·         New Orleans and other low elevation coastal areas will have to be abandoned.
·         Yields of rice, wheat, and corn will decline in temperate and especially tropic regions.

Perspective 3: Many people think that hunger and poverty are more urgent and serious issues than global warming. But how much worse would hunger and poverty be if global food production was reduced by 25%? A recent paper7 predicted that decreases of 25% would be increasingly common by the second half of this century. Population is predicted to rise by more than 35% by 20508. That means periods with about 45% less food per person by mid-century. These two things alone will dramatically increase both hunger and poverty. In fact, famine will be inevitable in most parts of the world. Of course we should deal with hunger, poverty, and all the other important issues we currently face. But if we don’t stop global warming soon enough, all the other good we do will be temporary, and the situation will be worse than ever.

You can do a similar exercise with whatever issue you think is more important than climate change. I already showed how healthcare and the economy would be severely negatively affected. For another example, violence and unrest will increase dramatically when people are hungry and there are millions of climate refugees. So if security is important to you, you should be trying to stop global warming. If preventing and curing sickness and injury is important to you, you should know that climate change has been called the biggest health threat we face. Among the reasons are that the number of deaths from heat waves will rise dramatically, deaths directly caused by other extreme weather events will go  up, climate refugee camps will be breeding grounds for diseases, tropical diseases will spread to more areas, and people who are malnourished or starving get sick much easier.

I hope you understand now why I said at the beginning that we need to try to keep warming below 1 degree. Fortunately, it takes a while for temperature to catch up with rising CO2 levels. So if we lower emissions quickly enough, temperatures won’t go as high as the peak CO2 level indicates. On the flip side, there is a lot of inertia to the warming, so surface temperatures will continue to rise for years or decades after CO2 levels begin to fall (depending largely on how quickly we reduce emissions). By not taking this problem seriously up to now, we have committed ourselves to living with increasing chances of triggering strong feedbacks and suffering the consequences. Some effects will definitely continue to worsen for a long time after CO2 levels fall. For example, sea level may continue to rise for centuries no matter what we do. This is what makes it our most urgent problem. We probably still have time to avoid the worst consequences, but only if act quickly and aggressively.

Urgency 4: Seeing how slow the world has been so reluctant to tackle this threat, I am worried that it may take a huge disaster to wake enough people up, and that by then it will be too late. What do I mean by that? Some people are already saying it is “too late”, but too late for what? It is probably too late to prevent sea levels from rising at least a few more inches, to prevent global temperature from rising more before it can begin to fall, to prevent the Arctic seas from being ice free for part of the year, to prevent more severe weather events than we already see, or to prevent the extinction of some more species. There is so much momentum in the system that many things like this will get worse before they get better. But it is probably not too late to prevent most of the effects I’ve listed above. For example, ocean acidity will begin to fall soon after atmospheric CO2 levels fall. If we prevent the large feedbacks from growing too strong, we can bring CO2 levels down.

The large feedbacks did not kick in too strongly during the hottest part of the current warm interglacial, so that is a good sign that they will probably not kick in if we keep warming below 1 degree C. If sensitivity is 5 degrees, 324 ppm is enough to warm the earth that much. So the safest course would be to get the CO2 level that low before temperature catches up with it. From the charts above, you can see that reductions of 5 or 6% per year are not large enough – it would take many hundreds of years to get back to 324 ppm. Even if sensitivity is 4 degrees, we’d need to lower CO2 levels to 338 ppm, which would take a couple hundred years if we begin 6% reductions now. Therefore, we really should make even larger reductions, at least at first. I would say 10% per year should be our minimum target if we start right now (and the target should rise every year that we don’t meet the target). It’s possible we would be safe if we made less than 10% reductions, but knowing the risks, would you really want to take that chance? If we were reasonable, we wouldn’t.

But so far we have not been reasonable at all. Few are even willing to discuss reducing emissions this much. They think large emissions cuts would be “too painful”. But compared to the pain the alternative will bring, the pain of cutting emissions is nothing. People who complain about the pain of making cuts should have demanded we start cutting emissions a few years ago, when the cuts per year could have been much smaller. Focusing on the pain of making cuts only promotes delay and makes the necessary cuts higher still. It is another form of denial. If we wait for a huge disaster that forces everyone to face reality, climate momentum will ensure that much larger disasters will follow. Dealing with the effects of disasters always comes before efforts to prevent another disaster, and reacting to a very large disaster will take a huge amount of resources. The numbers of small and medium disasters will already have been increasing, with more and more resources needed to deal with their effects. Each of these will do some damage to the economy, and when severe food shortages hit, that will completely devastate the global economy. (In fact, famine could very well be the big disaster that finally wakes us up.) Remember that the longer we wait the higher the emissions reductions will need to be. As the job gets tougher, our abilities will weaken. I don’t see any way we could have the resources to make such changes. Famine would be followed by mass extinction. We will be locked in a downward spiral of worse disasters and less ability to deal with them, while feedbacks make greenhouse gas levels higher than ever. The suffering and death in such a world is difficult to imagine. But if you try to imagine it, you will understand what I mean when I say “too late”.

Danger 4: I’ll end with what I think is the most serious danger. Extinction rates in modern times have been many times higher than normal because of human activities other than greenhouse gas emissions (over-fishing, over-hunting, deforestation, the spread of invasive species, pollution, etc.). Climate change has already added to the extinction rate and will add dramatically more if we don’t work very hard to prevent it. Below are extinction predictions from the 2007 IPCC report9.

·         1.2 – 2.0 degrees of warming:  9-31% (mean 18%) of species committed to extinction
·         2.1 – 2.3 degrees of warming: 15-37% (mean 24%) of species committed to extinction
·         2.6 – 3.3 degrees of warming: 21-52% (mean 35%) of species committed to extinction

If we continue as we have been, warming will go way beyond 3.3 degrees. That could cause over half of species to die off, qualifying as the sixth great extinction in the history of earth. Even reducing emissions with a target of 2 degrees of warming could lead to 3 - 4 degrees of warming when feedbacks happen, and that could be enough to cause a mass extinction. It is very difficult to predict extinction rates. Many people would think the rates above are unbelievably high, but I think they could easily be too low. Usually scientists who make such predictions don’t factor in things like what will happen when there are huge numbers of desperate, hungry people. Most people who are starving would care more about eating than about saving endangered species. Over-fishing and over-hunting and deforestation would go into overdrive. That would make a mass extinction much more likely.

Do we really want this to be our legacy? Do we want to be the species that caused a mass extinction? I know some people will try to whitewash this with thoughts such as, “Life will go on.” If everything but single-celled organisms died off, life would go on. But not the life we care about, not the life we depend on for our survival, and not us. Many people think we are so far above all the other forms of life that we could survive a mass extinction. But they don’t realize how completely we depend on other species, how almost all species depend directly or indirectly on many others. Even if our species survived, there would be very few of us left. I have no doubt that all our systems and civilization itself would collapse. I don’t think most people realize that when a mass extinction happens, it’s not just that many species go extinct. Most of the species that survive are greatly reduced in numbers for a long time (except for a short spike in species that live on decaying matter). Worst of all, in the past it has taken millions of years for biodiversity to recover from such an event. Species can die off quickly, but new species evolve very slowly. Each species we cause to go extinct is a terrible tragedy. Causing a mass extinction is the worst possible thing we could do. But unless we all work hard to make the necessary changes quickly, a mass extinction will be our legacy.

Perspective 4: You might think there is no way we can make the necessary changes to our energy and transportation systems quickly enough. But I know we can, because we have made huge changes extremely quickly in the past. Less than three months after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, the huge U.S. auto industry completely stopped making cars and trucks for domestic use and began making tanks, jeeps, trucks, airplanes, and other equipment for the war effort. That is a huge change in an incredibly short period of time. Other industries were also transformed very quickly at the same time. In just months, we were churning out huge numbers of ships, planes, tanks, and weapons. Huge research efforts were begun, including the one that led to the atomic bomb. Practically everyone pitched in. We did it because we knew we had to. If we had lost the war, our country would have been changed drastically, by force. Freedom and Democracy would have been lost. The world would have been a very different place.

Now we face a much greater danger. Losing the war would have been terrible, but most of us would have survived, and eventually we could have won back whatever freedoms and rights we had lost. With global warming, our entire civilization, maybe even our species, is at risk.

Reducing emissions by 10% each year is a huge task, but it is not impossible, not yet anyway. What will be impossible is preventing massive suffering and death if we don’t begin making large reductions very soon. Each year we delay is sentencing countless innocent people and other forms of life to death. If you value life at all, you must make stopping global warming your top priority, and you must demand your government do the same.

2.       Current effects are compiled from various studies and news reports. Most predictions are from “Six Degrees” by Mark Lynas and the IPCC reports.
4.       “Climate Change – Biological and Human Aspects, Second Edition” by Jonathan Cowie, p. 308