Global Warming: Be Worried, Be Very Worried (Time Magazine) 
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Time Magazine Cover Story     26 March 2006

Global Warming: Be Worried, Be Very Worried

Polar Ice Caps Are Melting Faster Than Ever ...
More and More Land Is Being Devastated By Drought ...
Rising Waters Are Drowning Low-Lying Communities ...
By Any Measure, Earth Is At ... The Tipping Point
By Jeffrey Kluger - Time

The climate is crashing, and global warming is to blame. Why the crisis hit
so soon - and what we can do about it.

No one can say exactly what it looks like when a planet takes ill, but it
probably looks a lot like Earth. Never mind what you've heard about global
warming as a slow-motion emergency that would take decades to play out.
Suddenly and unexpectedly, the crisis is upon us.

It certainly looked that way last week as the atmospheric bomb that was
Cyclone Larry - a Category 5 storm with wind bursts that reached 180 m.p.h.
- exploded through northeastern Australia. It certainly looked that way last
year as curtains of fire and dust turned the skies of Indonesia orange,
thanks to drought-fueled blazes sweeping the island nation. It certainly
looks that way as sections of ice the size of small states calve from the
disintegrating Arctic and Antarctic. And it certainly looks that way as the
sodden wreckage of New Orleans continues to molder, while the waters of the
Atlantic gather themselves for a new hurricane season just two months away.
Disasters have always been with us and surely always will be. But when they
hit this hard and come this fast - when the emergency becomes commonplace -
something has gone grievously wrong. That something is global warming.

The image of Earth as organism - famously dubbed Gaia by environmentalist
James Lovelock - has probably been overworked, but that's not to say the
planet can't behave like a living thing, and these days, it's a living thing
fighting a fever. From heat waves to storms to floods to fires to massive
glacial melts, the global climate seems to be crashing around us. Scientists
have been calling this shot for decades. This is precisely what they have
been warning would happen if we continued pumping greenhouse gases into the
atmosphere, trapping the heat that flows in from the sun and raising global
temperatures.

Environmentalists and lawmakers spent years shouting at one another about
whether the grim forecasts were true, but in the past five years or so, the
serious debate has quietly ended. Global warming, even most skeptics have
concluded, is the real deal, and human activity has been causing it. If
there was any consolation, it was that the glacial pace of nature would give
us decades or even centuries to sort out the problem.

But glaciers, it turns out, can move with surprising speed, and so can
nature. What few people reckoned on was that global climate systems are
booby-trapped with tipping points and feedback loops, thresholds past which
the slow creep of environmental decay gives way to sudden and
self-perpetuating collapse. Pump enough CO2 into the sky, and that last part
per million of greenhouse gas behaves like the 212th degree Fahrenheit that
turns a pot of hot water into a plume of billowing steam. Melt enough
Greenland ice, and you reach the point at which you're not simply dripping
meltwater into the sea but dumping whole glaciers. By one recent measure,
several Greenland ice sheets have doubled their rate of slide, and just last
week the journal Science published a study suggesting that by the end of the
century, the world could be locked in to an eventual rise in sea levels of
as much as 20 ft. Nature, it seems, has finally got a bellyful of us.

"Things are happening a lot faster than anyone predicted," says Bill
Chameides, chief scientist for the advocacy group Environmental Defense and
a former professor of atmospheric chemistry. "The last 12 months have been
alarming." Adds Ruth Curry of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in
Massachusetts: "The ripple through the scientific community is palpable."

And it's not just scientists who are taking notice. Even as nature crosses
its tipping points, the public seems to have reached its own. For years,
popular skepticism about climatological science stood in the way of
addressing the problem, but the naysayers - many of whom were on the payroll
of energy companies - have become an increasingly marginalized breed. In a
new TIME/ ABC News/ Stanford University poll, 85% of respondents agree that
global warming probably is happening. Moreover, most respondents say they
want some action taken. Of those polled, 87% believe the government should
either encourage or require lowering of power-plant emissions, and 85% think
something should be done to get cars to use less gasoline. Even Evangelical
Christians, once one of the most reliable columns in the conservative base,
are demanding action, most notably in February, when 86 Christian leaders
formed the Evangelical Climate Initiative, demanding that Congress regulate
greenhouse gases.

A collection of new global-warming books is hitting the shelves in response
to that awakening interest, followed closely by TV and theatrical
documentaries. The most notable of them is An Inconvenient Truth, due out in
May, a profile of former Vice President Al Gore and his climate-change work,
which is generating a lot of prerelease buzz over an unlikely topic and an
equally unlikely star. For all its lack of Hollywood flash, the film
compensates by conveying both the hard science of global warming and Gore's
particular passion.

Such public stirrings are at last getting the attention of politicians and
business leaders, who may not always respond to science but have a keen nose
for where votes and profits lie. State and local lawmakers have started
taking action to curb emissions, and major corporations are doing the same.
Wal-Mart has begun installing wind turbines on its stores to generate
electricity and is talking about putting solar reflectors over its parking
lots. HSBC, the world's second largest bank, has pledged to neutralize its
carbon output by investing in wind farms and other green projects. Even
President Bush, hardly a favorite of greens, now acknowledges climate change
and boasts of the steps he is taking to fight it. Most of those steps,
however, involve research and voluntary emissions controls, not exactly the
laws with teeth scientists are calling for.

Is it too late to reverse the changes global warming has wrought? That's
still not clear. Reducing our emissions output year to year is hard enough.
Getting it low enough so that the atmosphere can heal is a multigenerational
commitment. "Ecosystems are usually able to maintain themselves," says Terry
Chapin, a biologist and professor of ecology at the University of Alaska,
Fairbanks. "But eventually they get pushed to the limit of tolerance."

CO2 and the Poles

As a tiny component of our atmosphere, carbon dioxide helped warm Earth to
comfort levels we are all used to. But too much of it does an awful lot of
damage. The gas represents just a few hundred parts per million (p.p.m.) in
the overall air blanket, but they're powerful parts because they allow
sunlight to stream in but prevent much of the heat from radiating back out.
During the last ice age, the atmosphere's CO2 concentration was just 180
p.p.m., putting Earth into a deep freeze. After the glaciers retreated but
before the dawn of the modern era, the total had risen to a comfortable 280
p.p.m. In just the past century and a half, we have pushed the level to 381
p.p.m., and we're feeling the effects. Of the 20 hottest years on record, 19
occurred in the 1980s or later. According to NASA scientists, 2005 was one
of the hottest years in more than a century.

It's at the North and South poles that those steambath conditions are felt
particularly acutely, with glaciers and ice caps crumbling to slush. Once
the thaw begins, a number of mechanisms kick in to keep it going. Greenland
is a vivid example. Late last year, glaciologist Eric Rignot of the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and Pannir Kanagaratnam, a
research assistant professor at the University of Kansas, analyzed data from
Canadian and European satellites and found that Greenland ice is not just
melting but doing so more than twice as fast, with 53 cu. mi. draining away
into the sea last year alone, compared with 22 cu. mi. in 1996. A cubic mile
of water is about five times the amount Los Angeles uses in a year.

Dumping that much water into the ocean is a very dangerous thing. Icebergs
don't raise sea levels when they melt because they're floating, which means
they have displaced all the water they're ever going to. But ice on land,
like Greenland's, is a different matter. Pour that into oceans that are
already rising (because warm water expands), and you deluge shorelines. By
some estimates, the entire Greenland ice sheet would be enough to raise
global sea levels 23 ft., swallowing up large parts of coastal Florida and
most of Bangladesh. The Antarctic holds enough ice to raise sea levels more
than 215 ft.

Feedback Loops

One of the reasons the loss of the planet's ice cover is accelerating is
that as the poles' bright white surface shrinks, it changes the relationship
of Earth and the sun. Polar ice is so reflective that 90% of the sunlight
that strikes it simply bounces back into space, taking much of its energy
with it. Ocean water does just the opposite, absorbing 90% of the energy it
receives. The more energy it retains, the warmer it gets, with the result
that each mile of ice that melts vanishes faster than the mile that preceded
it.

That is what scientists call a feedback loop, and it's a nasty one, since
once you uncap the Arctic Ocean, you unleash another beast: the
comparatively warm layer of water about 600 ft. deep that circulates in and
out of the Atlantic. "Remove the ice," says Woods Hole's Curry, "and the
water starts talking to the atmosphere, releasing its heat. This is not a
good thing."

A similar feedback loop is melting permafrost, usually defined as land that
has been continuously frozen for two years or more. There's a lot of earthly
real estate that qualifies, and much of it has been frozen much longer than
two years - since the end of the last ice age, or at least 8,000 years ago.
Sealed inside that cryonic time capsule are layers of partially decayed
organic matter, rich in carbon. In high-altitude regions of Alaska, Canada
and Siberia, the soil is warming and decomposing, releasing gases that will
turn into methane and CO2. That, in turn, could lead to more warming and
permafrost thaw, says research scientist David Lawrence of the National
Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colo. And how much carbon
is socked away in Arctic soils? Lawrence puts the figure at 200 gigatons to
800 gigatons. The total human carbon output is only 7 gigatons a year.

One result of all that is warmer oceans, and a result of warmer oceans can
be, paradoxically, colder continents within a hotter globe. Ocean currents
running between warm and cold regions serve as natural thermoregulators,
distributing heat from the equator toward the poles. The Gulf Stream,
carrying warmth up from the tropics, is what keeps Europe's climate
relatively mild. Whenever Europe is cut off from the Gulf Stream,
temperatures plummet. At the end of the last ice age, the warm current was
temporarily blocked, and temperatures in Europe fell as much as 10 degrees
F, locking the continent in glaciers.

What usually keeps the Gulf Stream running is that warm water is lighter
than cold water, so it floats on the surface. As it reaches Europe and
releases its heat, the current grows denser and sinks, flowing back to the
south and crossing under the northbound Gulf Stream until it reaches the
tropics and starts to warm again. The cycle works splendidly, provided the
water remains salty enough. But if it becomes diluted by freshwater, the
salt concentration drops, and the water gets lighter, idling on top and
stalling the current. Last December, researchers associated with Britain's
National Oceanography Center reported that one component of the system that
drives the Gulf Stream has slowed about 30% since 1957. It's the increased
release of Arctic and Greenland meltwater that appears to be causing the
problem, introducing a gush of freshwater that's overwhelming the natural
cycle. In a global-warming world, it's unlikely that any amount of cooling
that resulted from this would be sufficient to support glaciers, but it
could make things awfully uncomfortable.

"The big worry is that the whole climate of Europe will change," says Adrian
Luckman, senior lecturer in geography at the University of Wales, Swansea.
"We in the U.K. are on the same latitude as Alaska. The reason we can live
here is the Gulf Stream."

Drought

As fast as global warming is transforming the oceans and the ice caps, it's
having an even more immediate effect on land. People, animals and plants
living in dry, mountainous regions like the western US make it through
summer thanks to snowpack that collects on peaks all winter and slowly melts
off in warm months. Lately the early arrival of spring and the unusually
blistering summers have caused the snowpack to melt too early, so that by
the time it's needed, it's largely gone. Climatologist Philip Mote of the
University of Washington has compared decades of snowpack levels in
Washington, Oregon and California and found that they are a fraction of what
they were in the 1940s, and some snowpacks have vanished entirely.

Global warming is tipping other regions of the world into drought in
different ways. Higher temperatures bake moisture out of soil faster,
causing dry regions that live at the margins to cross the line into
full-blown crisis. Meanwhile, El Nino events - the warm pooling of Pacific
waters that periodically drives worldwide climate patterns and has been
occurring more frequently in global-warming years - further inhibit
precipitation in dry areas of Africa and East Asia. According to a recent
study by NCAR, the percentage of Earth's surface suffering drought has more
than doubled since the 1970s.

Flora and Fauna

Hot, dry land can be murder on flora and fauna, and both are taking a bad
hit. Wildfires in such regions as Indonesia, the western US and even inland
Alaska have been increasing as timberlands and forest floors grow more
parched. The blazes create a feedback loop of their own, pouring more carbon
into the atmosphere and reducing the number of trees, which inhale CO2 and
release oxygen.

Those forests that don't succumb to fire die in other, slower ways. Connie
Millar, a paleoecologist for the US Forest Service, studies the history of
vegetation in the Sierra Nevada. Over the past 100 years, she has found, the
forests have shifted their tree lines as much as 100 ft. upslope, trying to
escape the heat and drought of the lowlands. Such slow-motion evacuation may
seem like a sensible strategy, but when you're on a mountain, you can go
only so far before you run out of room. "Sometimes we say the trees are
going to heaven because they're walking off the mountaintops," Millar says.

Across North America, warming-related changes are mowing down other flora
too. Manzanita bushes in the West are dying back; some prickly pear cacti
have lost their signature green and are instead a sickly pink; pine beetles
in western Canada and the US are chewing their way through tens of millions
of acres of forest, thanks to warmer winters. The beetles may even breach
the once insurmountable Rocky Mountain divide, opening up a path into the
rich timbering lands of the American Southeast.

With habitats crashing, animals that live there are succumbing too.
Environmental groups can tick off scores of species that have been
determined to be at risk as a result of global warming. Last year,
researchers in Costa Rica announced that two-thirds of 110 species of
colorful harlequin frogs have vanished in the past 30 years, with the
severity of each season's die-off following in lockstep with the severity of
that year's warming.

In Alaska, salmon populations are at risk as melting permafrost pours mud
into rivers, burying the gravel the fish need for spawning. Small animals
such as bushy-tailed wood rats, alpine chipmunks and pinon mice are being
chased upslope by rising temperatures, following the path of the fleeing
trees. And with sea ice vanishing, polar bears - prodigious swimmers but not
inexhaustible ones - are starting to turn up drowned. "There will be no
polar ice by 2060," says Larry Schweiger, president of the National Wildlife
Federation. "Somewhere along that path, the polar bear drops out."

What About Us?

It is fitting, perhaps, that as the species causing all the problems, we're
suffering the destruction of our habitat too, and we have experienced that
loss in terrible ways. Ocean waters have warmed by a full degree Fahrenheit
since 1970, and warmer water is like rocket fuel for typhoons and
hurricanes. Two studies last year found that in the past 35 years the number
of Category 4 and 5 hurricanes worldwide has doubled while the wind speed
and duration of all hurricanes has jumped 50%. Since atmospheric heat is not
choosy about the water it warms, tropical storms could start turning up in
some decidedly nontropical places. "There's a school of thought that sea
surface temperatures are warming up toward Canada," says Greg Holland,
senior scientist for NCAR in Boulder. "If so, you're likely to get tropical
cyclones there, but we honestly don't know."

What We Can Do

So much for environmental collapse happening in so many places at once has
at last awakened much of the world, particularly the 141 nations that have
ratified the Kyoto treaty to reduce emissions - an imperfect accord, to be
sure, but an accord all the same. The US, however, which is home to less
than 5% of Earth's population but produces 25% of CO2 emissions, remains
intransigent. Many environmentalists declared the Bush Administration
hopeless from the start, and while that may have been premature, it's
undeniable that the White House's environmental record - from the
abandonment of Kyoto to the President's broken campaign pledge to control
carbon output to the relaxation of emission standards - has been dismal.
George W. Bush's recent rhetorical nods to America's oil addiction and his
praise of such alternative fuel sources as switchgrass have yet to be
followed by real initiatives.

The anger surrounding all that exploded recently when NASA researcher Jim
Hansen, director of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies and a longtime
leader in climate-change research, complained that he had been harassed by
White House appointees as he tried to sound the global-warming alarm. "The
way democracy is supposed to work, the presumption is that the public is
well informed," he told TIME. "They're trying to deny the science." Up
against such resistance, many environmental groups have resolved simply to
wait out this Administration and hope for something better in 2009.

The Republican-dominated Congress has not been much more encouraging.
Senators John McCain and Joe Lieberman have twice been unable to get through
the Senate even mild measures to limit carbon. Senators Pete Domenici and
Jeff Bingaman, both of New Mexico and both ranking members of the chamber's
Energy Committee, have made global warming a high-profile matter. A white
paper issued in February will be the subject of an investigatory Senate
conference next week. A House delegation recently traveled to Antarctica,
Australia and New Zealand to visit researchers studying climate change. "Of
the 10 of us, only three were believers," says Representative Sherwood
Boehlert of New York. "Every one of the others said this opened their eyes."

Boehlert himself has long fought the environmental fight, but if the best
that can be said for most lawmakers is that they are finally recognizing the
global-warming problem, there's reason to wonder whether they will have the
courage to reverse it. Increasingly, state and local governments are filling
the void. The mayors of more than 200 cities have signed the US Mayors
Climate Protection Agreement, pledging, among other things, that they will
meet the Kyoto goal of reducing greenhouse-gas emissions in their cities to
1990 levels by 2012. Nine eastern states have established the Regional
Greenhouse Gas Initiative for the purpose of developing a cap-and-trade
program that would set ceilings on industrial emissions and allow companies
that overperform to sell pollution credits to those that underperform - the
same smart, incentive-based strategy that got sulfur dioxide under control
and reduced acid rain. And California passed the nation's toughest
automobile-emissions law last summer.

"There are a whole series of things that demonstrate that people want to act
and want their government to act," says Fred Krupp, president of
Environmental Defense. Krupp and others believe that we should probably
accept that it's too late to prevent CO2 concentrations from climbing to 450
p.p.m. (or 70 p.p.m. higher than where they are now). From there, however,
we should be able to stabilize them and start to dial them back down.

That goal should be attainable. Curbing global warming may be an order of
magnitude harder than, say, eradicating smallpox or putting a man on the
moon. But is it moral not to try? We did not so much march toward the
environmental precipice as drunkenly reel there, snapping at the scientific
scolds who told us we had a problem.

The scolds, however, knew what they were talking about. In a solar system
crowded with sister worlds that either emerged stillborn like Mercury and
Venus or died in infancy like Mars, we're finally coming to appreciate the
knife-blade margins within which life can thrive. For more than a century
we've been monkeying with those margins. It's long past time we set them
right.

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See also:

Feeling The Heat
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176986,00.html
Global warming is already disrupting the biological world, pushing many
species to the brink of extinction and turning others into runaway pests.
But the worst is yet to come

A Science Adviser Unmuzzled
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176828,00.html
Q&A: NASA's chief climate scientist, who charged that his views on global
warming were being squelched, says we're getting close to a tipping point

The Greenest Bank
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176810,00.html
HSBC is one banking behemoth that wants to be carbon neutral

How to Seize the Initiative
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176989,00.html
You don't have to wait for Washington to tell you to reduce emissions. You
can follow the lead of forward-thinking governments, retailers, artists and
even a utility company

An Ice-Free Passage
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176821,00.html
Global warming may be bad for polar bears, but for a little port town in
Manitoba, it could be a boon

The Climate Crusaders
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176991,00.html
They saw which way the wind was blowing and set out to save the world

Scourge of the Gas Guzzlers
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176829,00.html
When California legislator Fran Pavley introduced her landmark bill to limit
greenhouse gases, the SUVs circled

How It Affects Your Health
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1177002,00.html
Expect more risk of heatstrokes, asthma, allergies and infectious disease

Vicious Cycles
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1177014,00.html
The debate over whether Earth is warming up is over. Now we're learning that
climate disruptions feed off one another in accelerating spirals of
destruction. Scientists fear we may be approaching the point of no return

TIME Poll: Global Warming - Seeing the problem, not the solution
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176975,00.html

Ice, Wind and Fire - TIME Photo Essay
http://www.time.com/time/photoessays/2006/global_warming/

The Midwest Tornadoes: Surveying the Tornado Damage
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1173371,00.html
The cleanup begins after a devastating series of twisters (...) It could
have been much worse, according to the National Weather Service. "It was a
highly unusual storm for this time of year ." CLIP

ANTARCTICA'S ATMOSPHERE WARMING DRAMATICALLY, STUDY FINDS (March 30, 2006)
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/03/0330_060330_antarctica.html
The air over Antarctica has warmed dramatically over the past 30 years,
according to a new study of archived data collected by weather balloons
floated over the icy continent. The greatest warming -- nearly 1.4ºF
(0.75ºC) per decade in the winter -- has occurred about 3 miles (5
kilometers) above the surface. Scientists are hard pressed to explain the
temperature spike, which is three times larger than the global average. The
rise cannot be explained by the climate models scientists use to predict the
effects of global warming from increased greenhouse gases. "That could point
to some mechanism of climate change we don't understand, a failing in these
models, or just a result of natural climate variability," said John Turner,
a climate scientist with the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, England.
Meanwhile, surface temperatures have increased 4.5ºF (2.5ºC) in the last 50
years on the Antarctic Peninsula, the mountainous arm that trails toward the
southern tip of South America. "But the rest of Antarctica has done
virtually nothing [at the surface]", Turner said.

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