Global warming is occurring and the climate is
changing. One does not need a scientist
to confirm that fact. Awareness of the
local environment and perusal of news items should suffice. The fact that something so momentous is
taking place means there are money, power, and prestige on the table. Everyone from politicians, to corporations,
to scientists is determined to grab a piece of the action.
Of interest here is the role of the scientists and their
ability to make predictions of the particulars of climate change. A few are paid professionals whose job is to
spend their careers trying to understand the weather and climate. The majority are entrepreneurs who must
acquire funds from some agency or other in order to do their work. The way one gains this funding is to produce
a string of publications that provide an aura of competence, and to confidently
claim to program mangers that the issues are sufficiently understood that a
model will make some prediction about where the changes we are making to our
environment are taking us. Proposals for
funding are generally peer-reviewed in an attempt to validate the proposer’s
confidence. It is a system that often
works just fine.
There is a famous quote discussing the existence of “known
unknowns” and “unknown unknowns.”
Climate change modeling is replete with occurrences of both. There is, or at least should be, another
famous quote about “always validate your models.” Such validation is near impossible because of
the known and unknown unknowns and the difficulty in conducting global experiments. Even the data on “knowns” is difficult to
assess. This is not meant to discourage
modeling efforts which are important, but to reign in the excessive confidence
with which modeling results are presented in the popular media. A good scientific paper must include
estimates of the uncertainty involved in any conclusion. A good newspaper article will blithely ignore
any consideration of uncertainties. Why
complicate a good story?
The net result is that modeling claims are often proved
to be false or inaccurate, providing ammunition for those who deny human-initiated
climate change.
There is an even more troubling aspect of the assumption
that the Earth’s climate can be accurately modeled. There are those who claim that geoengineering
schemes are sufficiently understood that they will allow us to solve our
warming problem if we so desire.
This somewhat long introduction was prompted by two
articles that discuss aspects of global climate change that are rarely
discussed, but have the benefit of providing relatively near-term benefits to both
human health and the stabilization of the global climate. These articles also provide examples of the
complexity of climate response to human activities, and serve as a warning to
those who would use simple assumptions to conclude that human geoengineering
can solve our problems.
Carbon dioxide is the largest pollutant we produce
contributing to global warming, but it is not the most potent. There are other pollutants that produce comparable
effects but have the benefit of being more easily contained and
eliminated. That is the point made by David
G.Victor, Charles F. Kennel, and Veerabhadran Ramanathan in a Foreign Affairs article [2012] A Climate Threat We Can Beat: What It Is and How to Deal with It.
“At least 40 percent of current
global warming can be blamed on four other types of pollutants: dark soot
particles called black carbon, methane, lower atmospheric ozone, and industrial
gases such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), which
are used as coolants in refrigerators. Nearly all these pollutants have life
spans of just a few weeks to a decade -- much shorter than that of carbon
dioxide. But although their tenure is brief, they are potent warmers. Emitting
just one ton of black carbon, for example, has the same immediate effect on
warming as emitting 500-2,000 tons of carbon dioxide.”
Limiting these pollutants would not arouse the political
and social angst that has hindered progress on carbon dioxide. In fact, a program to address them would be a
social and economic boon.
“A few hundred million tons of
crops are lost to ozone smog every year; in India, air pollutants have
decreased the production of rice by about ten million tons per year, compared
with annual output in the 1980s. Globally, the inhalation of soot produced by
cooking indoors already kills about two million people each year, mostly women
and children living in extreme poverty. And because soot is dark, it traps heat
from sunlight and thus speeds melting when it settles on mountain glaciers -- a
direct threat to drinking-water supplies and agricultural lands that depend on
glacier-fed river systems in China and India, such as the Ganges, the Indus,
and the Yangtze.”
The technology for controlling these pollutants is
already in hand. What is required is the
implementation of the appropriate policies.
There is much to be gained in pursuing the short-term goal of minimizing
the four identified pollutants.
“Last year, the UNEP [United
Nations Environment Program] summarized their work, highlighting the potential
benefits of installing new cookstoves, building more efficient power plants
[curbing emissions], and plugging the leaks that occur when natural gas is
extracted from wells. The UNEP concluded that such steps would make it possible
to cut 40 percent of global man-made methane emissions and almost 75 percent of
global black carbon emissions by 2030. Those reductions could ultimately
prevent as many as five million deaths every year and safeguard as many as 140
million tons of corn, rice, and soybeans every year -- the equivalent of four
percent of annual global production.”
The authors then provided this startling assessment.
“These measures would also halve the global warming expected to occur
between now and 2050....”
A second article by Veerabhadran Ramanathan, Jessica
Seddon, and David G. Victor appeared in Foreign
Affairs recently dealing with related topics: The Next Front on Climate Change: How to Avoid a Dimmer, Drier World. Human activity also produces a number of
atmospheric pollutants that that tend to counter the warming effects described
above, but that doesn’t mean they don’t contribute to climate change.
“Until now, governments have
focused on limiting the greenhouse gases that cause global warming and its
attendant hazards, such as rising sea levels and stronger storms. But there is
more to climate change than higher temperatures. Many of the activities that
cause greenhouse gas emissions—burning coal for power, diesel for transport,
and wood for cooking, for example—also yield ultra-small particles known as
aerosols, which blanket vast areas in a haze that blocks and scatters sunlight.
By reducing the solar energy that reaches the earth’s surface, aerosols reduce
evaporation and slow the water cycle that governs where, when, and how much
rain falls.”
These aerosol emissions are well-known, but most studies
have focused on temperature changing effects.
“Darker aerosols, such as diesel
soot and other kinds of black carbon, absorb sunlight and accelerate warming.
But lighter aerosols, such as the sulfates and nitrates formed from coal,
gasoline, and other fuel emissions, cool the planet by reflecting sunlight back
into space. That explains, in part, why the world hasn’t seen more of a
temperature increase from the greenhouse gases already present in the
atmosphere.”
The cooling or “dimming” effects of this class of
aerosols produces first local effects due to the concentration of sources
associated with population and industrial distributions before they contribute
to net global effects. This means that
local pollution can affect precipitation patterns in complex ways.
“Since the 1880s, when reliable
record keeping began, global temperatures have increased by about 0.9 degrees
Celsius. And as the planet has warmed, rainfall at latitudes above 45 degrees
has generally increased. But twice since the mid-twentieth century, surges in
aerosol emissions have significantly disrupted this pattern, reducing rainfall
in a number of regions.”
“The first disruption was the
result of the sulfur dioxide emissions produced by the massive combustion of
coal and other fuels across Europe and North America in the mid-twentieth
century, driven by rapid industrial growth after World War II. From the 1950s
to the late 1980s, global emissions of sulfur dioxide (which in the atmosphere
becomes sulfate, a reflective aerosol) nearly doubled, reducing the amount of
sunlight reaching the earth’s surface by about two percent, on average. As a
direct result of this dimming, average rainfall in the Northern Hemisphere
declined by between three and four percent over the same period.”
Just as small global temperature effects can have major
consequences, these seemingly small changes in average precipitation can produce
significant effects.
“Indeed, there is strong
evidence that sulfur dioxide emissions in the United States and western Europe
contributed to the Sahelian megadroughts that began in the 1960s and continued
through the 1990s, a period during which precipitation in the Sahel and some
other parts of sub-Saharan Africa fell by between 25 and 50 percent relative to
twentieth-century averages.”
Policy decisions made in the 1970s have reduced aerosol
pollution and allowed average precipitation levels in North America and Europe to
return to the earlier values.
The second aerosol-caused disruption is occurring in East
Asia and South Asia.
“These regions, which have
rapidly industrialized over the past four decades, have seen a two- to fourfold
increase in sulfur dioxide and black carbon emissions since the 1970s. As a
result, in 2010, China and India received somewhere between ten and 15 percent
less sunlight than they did in 1970.”
This pollution did not go unnoticed by Mother Earth.
“As the wind has carried
sulfates and black carbon over thousands of miles, the dimming effect has
extended to the atmosphere over the Indian Ocean, reducing the evaporation of
seawater and thus weakening the monsoons that bring much-needed water to East
Asia and South Asia every year. From 1950 to 2002, the most recent period for
which estimates are available, there was a seven percent decrease in average
annual rainfall over the Indo-Gangetic Plain, the fertile belt of land crossing
eastern Pakistan, northern India, and Bangladesh that is home to more than one
billion people, many of them dependent on rain-fed agriculture. Over the same
period, summer monsoon rainfall in parts of northern China decreased by more
than ten percent.”
As was the case with emissions of particulates that cause
atmospheric heating, those that cause the cooling, or dimming, effect can be
addressed with current technologies. The
main areas of concern are power generation, transportation, and energy
consumption by the poor.
“With regard to electric power
generation, most of the concern about aerosols centers on burning coal, which
is responsible for more than 70 percent of the world’s sulfur dioxide
emissions. Given its environmental and health impacts, conventional coal power
is increasingly hard to justify.”
“Regulators in California and
the European Union, meanwhile, have already pioneered policies that cut aerosol
emissions from transportation. They have mandated cleaner fuels and combustion
technologies, such as low-sulfur diesel and exhaust systems equipped with
efficient particulate filters and catalytic converters. Officials elsewhere
should follow their lead, and they should pair these regulations with rigorous
compliance regimes, which are currently lacking in many countries.”
“Cutting aerosol emissions
produced by burning dirty fuels in the world’s poorest households is another
way to reduce global dimming. Just over one billion people, most of them in the
developing world, rely on kerosene to light their homes, and three billion use
solid fuels, such as crop residue and dung, for cooking and heating. Burning
these fuels with traditional technologies generates aerosols that damage lungs
along with the climate: the particulates emitted by biomass-based cooking and
heating are responsible for about a third of the dimming in South Asia. Cleaner
technologies for cooking, heating, and lighting, such as energy-efficient
cookstoves and solar lanterns, are readily available, and making them
universally accessible would offer huge health and environmental benefits to the
world’s poor.”
Since these solar “dimming” aerosols act to counter the
effect of increased greenhouse gases, eliminating them would require even
greater efforts to inhibit the emission of atmosphere-warming pollutants such
as carbon dioxide.
“Since aerosols have a short
atmospheric life span, pursuing policies such as these could significantly
reduce global dimming within ten or 20 years. That would dramatically limit the
risk of droughts and irregular monsoons. It would also heat up the planet by
reducing the atmosphere’s reflective aerosol ‘mask,’ however, so any effort to
reduce global dimming must be accompanied by significant cuts to carbon dioxide
and other greenhouse gas emissions.”
The success of these solar dimming aerosols has been
recognized by a class of scientist and capitalists who would argue that it is
cheaper, quicker, more efficient—and even safer—to purposely modify the earth’s
climate by spraying large amounts of dimming aerosols into the atmosphere. The atmospheric temperature would go down and
we could continue spewing greenhouse gases into the air indefinitely. What could be simpler? What could possibly go wrong?
The issue of geoengineering the climate brings us back to
where we began and the notion that climate modeling is beset by “known unknowns”
and “unknown unknowns” and is most renowned for its incorrect predictions. It is impossible to change the climate of the
Earth without causing disruptions.
Lowering the atmospheric temperature would lower ocean evaporation and
alter precipitation patterns. Droughts
and flooding would begin to occur in different locations, perhaps threatening
the lives of billions of people. Don’t
listen to those people who would sell such geoengineering nonsense.
This source
provides us with a chart of temperature over recent geologic history.
This data is derived from ice cores removed from
glaciers. The temperature is derived
from the local temperature where the ice core was extracted. Consider the temperature excursions that have
occurred over the past 100,000 years. They
have been enormous—much larger than the potential human-generated changes that
arise in current climate discussions. In
fact, plotting at this scale dampens really rapid changes that have occurred in
recent geological history. The chart is
accompanied by these comments.
“On a shorter time scale, global
temperatures fluctuate often and rapidly. Various records reveal numerous
large, widespread, abrupt climate changes over the past 100,000 years. One of
the more recent intriguing findings is the remarkable speed of these changes.
Within the incredibly short time span (by geologic standards) of only a few
decades or even a few years, global temperatures have fluctuated by as much as
15°F (8°C) or more.”
“For example, as Earth was
emerging out of the last glacial cycle, the warming trend was interrupted
12,800 years ago when temperatures dropped dramatically in only several
decades. A mere 1,300 years later, temperatures locally spiked as much as 20°F
(11°C) within just several years. Sudden changes like this occurred at least 24
times during the past 100,000 years. In a relative sense, we are in a time of
unusually stable temperatures today—how long will it last?”
Those who believe humans are causing irreversible climate
change have plenty of scientific evidence to point to. Those who choose not to believe also have plenty
of geologic data to point to in arguing that the climate change we observe is
probably natural. It has become like religion
and the existence of a God; it is an argument that no one can win.
Perhaps a better approach is to stare at the recent few
tens of thousands of years on that chart and admit that humanity has been
graced with the most benign climate period in history. For whatever reason, this “stable” climate
has allowed us the time to develop our civilization. That civilization could be taken away from us
in a human lifetime, either by our own actions or by the actions of Mother Earth. We were lucky enough to stumble on the scene
during an era with a relatively stable climate.
The best strategy when existing in a state of unstable
equilibrium is to change nothing. No
matter what we believe about current climate change, the appropriate plan
should be to get the planet back into the state it was in when we began to mess
with it. After we have accomplished that
to the best of our abilities, then we should hold on tight and hope that we are
provided a few more years of grace.
For the interested reader, here are a few more articles
on climate change.
I'm excited to see your article:) For the interested reader, here are a few more articles on climate change, such as this one published at http://bigessaywriter.com/blog/climate-changing-or-main-problem-of-the-21st-century and many others! Keep it up!
ReplyDelete