There’s
this pervasive belief that the real decimation from global climate change is
somewhere between 50 and 100 years away. All those maps showing devastating coastal
water rises are way into the future, prompting many to shrug and either believe
that technology will solve that problem by then or that the climate change we
are experiencing is simply cyclical natural event that will dissipate to
normal. The worst scenarios heap apocalyptic visions on distant generations… not
us!
But
according to a group of the best and the brightest scientists combing through
the massive existing data, the thousands of well-researched articles written by
the best climatologists in the world, the earth will be a tough place to live
in within the very near term. The United Nations’ “Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) has released a highly anticipated report that reveals
a glimpse of Earth half a degree Celsius (0.5 C) warmer than it is
today; and outlines what we must do to keep the global temperature from
rising any higher.
“With the 2015 Paris
Agreement, the word committed to keeping global warming below 2 C (3.6 degrees
Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels, and preferably below 1.5 C.
“According to the report
released early Monday [10/8], the difference between these two goals is far
more profound than the diminutive difference suggests, and would potentially
spare hundreds of millions of people from poverty…
“At 1.5 C we can expect to see an ice-free Arctic summer once a
century, according to the report. At 2 C, that risk shoots up to once every
decade… Under the 2 C scenario, sea level rise is expected to be 10 centimeters
(4 inches) higher than under the 1.5 C scenario.
“Human-caused climate change has already warmed the world by
around 1 C, and the IPCC stresses how we are already seeing devastating
consequences, particularly in the form of extreme weather.
“And then there are the coral reefs. Over past years, global
warming has ravaged the oceans’ richest ecosystems, with bleaching events
across the tropics. At 1.5 C, the IPCC reports says, we can expect to lose
between 70 and 90 percent of our reefs. But 2 C of warming would see them virtually
wiped out — a loss of at least 99 percent.” TheRealNews.com, October 8th.
“But
the headlines are that these are not harms we can expect in the distant future…
It’s bad now – think about all the devastating hurricanes that have slammed
into just the United States in the last three years, even as I am writing this
blog – but in just 12 years, we could face mass starvation, serious and
irreversible environmental damage, a spread of disease as infected insects
migrate to find their temperature comfort zones. The
new United Nations “study says that going past 1.5C is dicing with the planet's
liveability. And the 1.5C temperature ‘guard rail’ could be exceeded in just 12
years, in 2030.
“We can stay below it - but it will require urgent, large-scale
changes from governments and individuals and we will have to invest a massive
pile of cash every year, about 2.5% of global gross domestic product (GDP), the
value of all goods and services produced, for two decades.
“Even then, we will still need machines, trees and plants to
capture carbon from the air that we can then store deep underground - forever…
[While governments must act, individual action is necessary too.]
“But it adds that the
world cannot meet its target without changes by individuals, urging people to: buy
less meat, milk, cheese and butter and more locally sourced seasonal food -
and throw less of it away • drive electric cars but
walk or cycle short distances • take trains and buses instead
of planes • use videoconferencing instead of
business travel • use a washing line instead
of a tumble dryer • insulate homes •
demand low carbon in every consumer product
“Lifestyle
changes can make a big difference, said Dr Debra Roberts, [one of the IPCC's
co-chairs]… ‘That's a very empowering message for the individual," she
said. ‘This is not about remote science; it is about where we live and work,
and it gives us a cue on how we might be able to contribute to that massive
change, because everyone is going to have to be involved… You might say you
don't have control over land use, but you do have control over what you eat and
that determines land use… We can choose the way we move in cities and if we
don't have access to public transport - make sure you are electing politicians
who provide options around public transport.’” BBC.com, October 8th.
We
know that our government is an outlier as one of the very few nations that deny
than man-induced climate change. We’ve pulled out of the Paris climate accord
and our President is pushing for a greater reliance on the most toxic source of
electric power: coal-fired turbines. We really need to stop electing
politicians who are perpetrating misery that will seriously challenge our
quality of life, perhaps life itself, within the lifetimes of most of the
world’s existing population.
I’m Peter Dekom, and failing to
address climate change has become a matter of life and death.
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