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Re: Global Warming: The Inuit Take on Washington
Title: Re: [PEN-L] Global Warming: The Inuit Take on
Washingt
Anyone seen or heard anything more about this?
adrienne
Is 400 gigatons of methane locked in the
frozen arctic tundra a ticking time bomb?
By John Atcheson for the Baltimore
Sun
December 15, 2004
The Arctic Council's recent report on the
effects of global warming in the far north paints a grim picture:
global floods, extinction of polar bears and other marine mammals,
collapsed fisheries. But it ignored a ticking time bomb buried in the
Arctic tundra.
There are enormous quantities of naturally
occurring greenhouse gasses trapped in ice-like structures in the cold
northern muds and at the bottom of the seas. These ices, called
clathrates, contain 3,000 times as much methane as is in the
atmosphere. Methane is more than 20 times as strong a greenhouse gas
as carbon dioxide.
Now here's the scary part. A temperature
increase of merely a few degrees would cause these gases to volatilize
and "burp" into the atmosphere, which would further raise
temperatures, which would release yet more methane, heating the Earth
and seas further, and so on. There's 400 gigatons of methane locked in
the frozen arctic tundra - enough to start this chain reaction - and
the kind of warming the Arctic Council predicts is sufficient to melt
the clathrates and release these greenhouse gases into the
atmosphere.
Once triggered, this cycle could result in
runaway global warming the likes of which even the most pessimistic
doomsayers aren't talking about.
An apocalyptic fantasy concocted by
hysterical environmentalists? Unfortunately, no. Strong geologic
evidence suggests something similar has happened at least twice
before.
The most recent of these catastrophes
occurred about 55 million years ago in what geologists call the
Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), when methane burps caused
rapid warming and massive die-offs, disrupting the climate for more
than 100,000 years.
The granddaddy of these catastrophes
occurred 251 million years ago, at the end of the Permian period, when
a series of methane burps came close to wiping out all life on
Earth.
More than 94 percent of the marine species
present in the fossil record disappeared suddenly as oxygen levels
plummeted and life teetered on the verge of extinction. Over the
ensuing 500,000 years, a few species struggled to gain a foothold in
the hostile environment. It took 20 million to 30 million years for
even rudimentary coral reefs to re-establish themselves and for
forests to regrow. In some areas, it took more than 100 million years
for ecosystems to reach their former healthy diversity.
Geologist Michael J. Benton lays out the
scientific evidence for this epochal tragedy in a recent book, When
Life Nearly Died: The Greatest Mass Extinction of All Time. As with
the PETM, greenhouse gases, mostly carbon dioxide from increased
volcanic activity, warmed the earth and seas enough to release massive
amounts of methane from these sensitive clathrates, setting off a
runaway greenhouse effect.
The cause of all this havoc?
In both cases, a temperature increase of
about 10.8 degrees Fahrenheit, about the upper range for the average
global increase today's models predict can be expected from burning
fossil fuels by 2100. But these models could be the tail wagging the
dog since they don't add in the effect of burps from warming gas
hydrates. Worse, as the Arctic Council found, the highest temperature
increases from human greenhouse gas emissions will occur in the arctic
regions - an area rich in these unstable clathrates.
If we trigger this runaway release of
methane, there's no turning back. No do-overs. Once it starts, it's
likely to play out all the way.
Humans appear to be capable of emitting
carbon dioxide in quantities comparable to the volcanic activity that
started these chain reactions. According to the U.S. Geological
Survey, burning fossil fuels releases more than 150 times the amount
of carbon dioxide emitted by volcanoes - the equivalent of nearly
17,000 additional volcanoes the size of Hawaii's Kilauea.
And that is the time bomb the Arctic Council
ignored.
How likely is it that humans will cause
methane burps by burning fossil fuels? No one knows. But it is
somewhere between possible and likely at this point, and it becomes
more likely with each passing year that we fail to act.
So forget rising sea levels, melting ice
caps, more intense storms, more floods, destruction of habitats and
the extinction of polar bears. Forget warnings that global warming
might turn some of the world's major agricultural areas into deserts
and increase the range of tropical diseases, even though this is the
stuff we're pretty sure will happen.
Instead, let's just get with the Bush
administration's policy of pre- emption. We can't afford to have the
first sign of a failed energy policy be the mass extinction of life on
Earth. We have to act now.
John Atcheson, a geologist, has held a
variety of policy positions in several federal government
agencies.
© 2004 Baltimore Sun
Action is the antidote to despair. ----Joan Baez
At 1:28 PM -0500 12/22/04, Yoshie Furuhashi wrote:
"Global Warming: The Inuit Take on
Washington":
<http://montages.blogspot.com/2004/12/global-warming-inuit-take-on.html>
--
Yoshie
* Critical Montages:
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
* "Proud of Britain":
<http://www.proudofbritain.net/ > and
<http://www.proud-of-britain.org.uk/>
- Thread context:
- Re: More Nitzan/Bichler workon imperialism, (continued)
- the exchange value of a philosophy degree,
Eubulides Wed 22 Dec 2004, 23:04 GMT
- a Holiday gift to pen-l: Try this link,
Devine, James Wed 22 Dec 2004, 19:20 GMT
- Global Warming: The Inuit Take on Washington,
Yoshie Furuhashi Wed 22 Dec 2004, 18:31 GMT
- economics and class struggle behind legal victory.,
Charles Brown Wed 22 Dec 2004, 13:46 GMT
- Police: Soldier staged shooting to avoid return to Iraq,
Charles Brown Wed 22 Dec 2004, 13:00 GMT
- Is this the long wave? Long wave Good-bye?,
Eugene Coyle Wed 22 Dec 2004, 05:16 GMT
- The hidden costs of promiscuity,
Louis Proyect Wed 22 Dec 2004, 02:02 GMT
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