Time
is fast running out to stop irreversible climate change, a group of
global warming experts warns today. We have only 100 months to avoid
disaster. Andrew Simms explains why we must act now - and where to begin.
If
you shout "fire" in a crowded theatre, when there is none, you
understand that you might be arrested for irresponsible behaviour and
breach of the peace. But from today, I smell smoke, I see flames and I
think it is time to shout. I don't want you to panic, but I do think it
would be a good idea to form an orderly queue to leave the building.
Because
in just 100 months' time, if we are lucky, and based on a quite
conservative estimate, we could reach a tipping point for the
beginnings of runaway climate change. That said, among people working
on global warming, there are countless models, scenarios, and different
iterations of all those models and scenarios. So, let us be clear from
the outset about exactly what we mean.
The concentration of
carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere today, the most prevalent
greenhouse gas, is the highest it has been for the past 650,000 years.
In the space of just 250 years, as a result of the coal-fired
Industrial Revolution, and changes to land use such as the growth of
cities and the felling of forests, we have released, cumulatively, more
than 1,800bn tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere. Currently,
approximately 1,000 tonnes of CO2 are released into the Earth's
atmosphere every second, due to human activity. Greenhouse gases trap
incoming solar radiation, warming the atmosphere. When these gases
accumulate beyond a certain level - often termed a "tipping point" -
global warming will accelerate, potentially beyond control.
Faced
with circumstances that clearly threaten human civilisation, scientists
at least have the sense of humour to term what drives this process as
"positive feedback". But if translated into an office workplace
environment, it's the sort of "positive feedback" from a manager that
would run along the lines of: "You're fired, you were rubbish anyway,
you have no future, your home has been demolished and I've killed your
dog."
In climate change, a number of feedback loops amplify
warming through physical processes that are either triggered by the
initial warming itself, or the increase in greenhouse gases. One
example is the melting of ice sheets. The loss of ice cover reduces the
ability of the Earth's surface to reflect heat and, by revealing darker
surfaces, increases the amount of heat absorbed. Other dynamics include
the decreasing ability of oceans to absorb CO2 due to higher wind
strengths linked to climate change. This has already been observed in
the Southern Ocean and North Atlantic, increasing the amount of CO2 in
the atmosphere, and adding to climate change.
Because of such
self-reinforcing positive feedbacks (which, because of the accidental
humour of science, we must remind ourselves are, in fact, negative),
once a critical greenhouse concentration threshold is passed, global
warming will continue even if we stop releasing additional greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere. If that happens, the Earth's climate will
shift into another, more volatile state, with different ocean
circulation, wind and rainfall patterns. The implications of which,
according to a growing litany of research, are potentially catastrophic
for life on Earth. Such a change in the state of the climate system is
often referred to as irreversible climate change.
So, how
exactly do we arrive at the ticking clock of 100 months? It's possible
to estimate the length of time it will take to reach a tipping point.
To do so you combine current greenhouse gas concentrations with the
best estimates for the rates at which emissions are growing, the
maximum concentration of greenhouse gases allowable to forestall
potentially irreversible changes to the climate system, and the effect
of those environmental feedbacks. We followed the latest data and
trends for carbon dioxide, then made allowances for all human
interferences that influence temperatures, both those with warming and
cooling effects. We followed the judgments of the mainstream climate
science community, represented by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC), on what it will take to retain a good chance of
not crossing the critical threshold of the Earth's average surface
temperature rising by 2C above pre-industrial levels. We were cautious
in several ways, optimistic even, and perhaps too much so. A rise of 2C
may mask big problems that begin at a lower level of warming. For
example, collapse of the Greenland ice sheet is more than likely to be
triggered by a local warming of 2.7C, which could correspond to a
global mean temperature increase of 2C or less. The disintegration of
the Greenland ice sheet could correspond to a sea-level rise of up to 7
metres.
In arriving at our timescale, we also used the lower end
of threats in assessing the impact of vanishing ice cover and other
carbon-cycle feedbacks (those wanting more can download a note on
method from onehundredmonths.org). But the result is worrying enough.
We
found that, given all of the above, 100 months from today we will reach
a concentration of greenhouse gases at which it is no longer "likely"
that we will stay below the 2C temperature rise threshold. "Likely" in
this context refers to the definition of risk used by the IPCC. But,
even just before that point, there is still a one third chance of
crossing the line.
Today is just another Friday in August.
Drowsy and close. Office workers' minds are fixed on the weekend,
clock-watching, waiting perhaps for a holiday if your finances have
escaped the credit crunch and rising food and fuel prices. In the
evening, trains will be littered with abandoned newspaper sports pages,
all pretending interest in the football transfers. For once it seems
justified to repeat TS Eliot's famous lines: "This is the way the world
ends/Not with a bang but a whimper."
But does it have to be this
way? Must we curdle in our complacency and allow our cynicism about
politicians to give them an easy ride as they fail to act in our, the
national and the planet's best interest? There is now a different clock
to watch than the one on the office wall. Contrary to being a counsel
of despair, it tells us that everything we do from now matters. And,
possibly more so than at any other time in recent history.
It
tells us, for example, that only a government that was sleepwalking or
in a chemically induced coma would countenance building a third runway
at Heathrow, or a new generation of coal-fired power stations such as
the proposed new plant at Kingsnorth in Kent. Infrastructure that is
fossil-fuel-dependent locks in patterns of future greenhouse gas
emissions, radically reducing our ability to make the short- to
medium-term cuts that are necessary.
Deflecting blame and
responsibility is a great skill of officialdom. The most common
strategies used by government recently have been wringing their hands
and blaming China's rising emissions, and telling individuals to, well,
be a bit more careful. On the first get-out, it is delusory to think
that countries such as China, India and Brazil will fundamentally
change until wealthy countries such as Britain take a lead. And it is
wildly unrealistic to think that individuals alone can effect a
comprehensive re-engineering of the nation's fossil-fuel-dependent
energy, food and transport systems. The government must lead.
In
their inability to take action commensurate with the scale and
timeframe of the climate problem, the government is mocked both by
Britain's own history, and by countries much smaller, poorer and more
economically isolated than we are.
The challenge is rapid
transition of the economy in order to live within our environmental
means, while preserving and enhancing our general wellbeing. In some
important ways, we've been here before, and can learn lessons from
history. Under different circumstances, Britain achieved astonishing
things while preparing for, fighting and recovering from the second
world war. In the six years between 1938 and 1944, the economy was
re-engineered and there were dramatic cuts in resource use and
household consumption. These coincided with rising life expectancy and
falling infant mortality. We consumed less of almost everything, but
ate more healthily and used our disposable income on what, today, we
might call "low-carbon good times".
A National Savings Movement
held marches, processions and displays in every city, town and village
in the country. There were campaigns to Holiday at Home and endless
festivities such as dances, concerts, boxing displays, swimming galas,
and open-air theatre - all organised by local authorities with the
express purpose of saving fuel by discouraging unnecessary travel. To
lead by example, very public energy restrictions were introduced in
government and local authority buildings, shops and railway stations.
This was so successful that the results beat cuts previously planned in
an over-complex rationing scheme. The public largely assented to
measures to curb consumption because they understood that they were to
ensure "the fairest possible distribution of the necessities and
comforts of daily life".
Now, 2008, we face the fallout from the
credit crisis, high oil and rising food prices, and the massive added
challenge of having to avert climate change.
Does a war
comparison sound dramatic? In April 2007, Margaret Beckett, then
foreign secretary, gave a largely overlooked lecture called Climate
Change: The Gathering Storm. "It was a time when Churchill, perceiving
the dangers that lay ahead, struggled to mobilise the political will
and industrial energy of the British Empire to meet those dangers. He
did so often in the face of strong opposition," she said. "Climate
change is the gathering storm of our generation. And the implications -
should we fail to act - could be no less dire: and perhaps even more
so."
In terms of what is possible in times of economic stress and
isolation, Cuba provides an even more embarrassing example to show up
our national tardiness. In a single year in 2006 Cuba rolled-out a
nationwide scheme replacing inefficient incandescent lightbulbs with
low-energy alternatives. Prior to that, at the end of the cold war,
after losing access to cheap Soviet oil, it switched over to growing
most of its food for domestic consumption on small scale, often urban
plots, using mostly low-fossil-fuel organic techniques. Half the food
consumed in the capital, Havana, was grown in the city's own gardens.
Cuba echoed and surpassed what America achieved in its push for
"Victory Gardening" during the second world war. Back then, led by
Eleanor Roosevelt, between 30-40% of vegetables for domestic
consumption were produced by the Victory Gardening movement.
So
what can our own government do to turn things around today? Over the
next 100 months, they could launch a Green New Deal, taking inspiration
from President Roosevelt's famous 100-day programme implementing his
New Deal in the face of the dust bowls and depression. Last week, a
group of finance, energy and environmental specialists produced just
such a plan.
Addressed at the triple crunch of the credit
crisis, high oil prices and global warming, the plan is to rein in
reckless financial institutions and use a range of fiscal tools, new
measures and reforms to the tax system, such as a windfall tax on oil
companies. The resources raised can then be invested in a massive
environmental transformation programme that could insulate the economy
from recession, create countless new jobs and allow Britain to play its
part in meeting the climate challenge.
Goodbye new airport
runways, goodbye new coal-fired power stations. Next, as a precursor to
enabling and building more sustainable systems for transport, energy,
food and overhauling the nation's building stock, the government needs
to brace itself to tackle the City. Currently, financial institutions
are giving us the worst of all worlds. We have woken to find the
foundations of our economy made up of unstable, exotic financial
instruments. At the same time, and perversely, as awareness of climate
change goes up, ever more money pours through the City into the oil
companies. These companies list their fossil-fuel reserves as "proven"
or "probable". A new category of "unburnable" should be introduced, to
fundamentally change the balance of power in the City. Instead of using
vast sums of public money to bail out banks because they are considered
"too big to fail", they should be reduced in size until they are small
enough to fail without hurting anyone. It is only a climate system
capable of supporting human civilisation that is too big to fail.
Oil
companies made profits when oil was $10 a barrel. With the price now
wobbling around $130, there is a huge amount of unearned profit waiting
for a windfall tax. Money raised - in this way and through other
changes in taxation, new priorities for pension funds and innovatory
types of bonds - would go towards a long-overdue massive
decarbonisation of our energy system. Decentralisation, renewables,
efficiency, conservation and demand management will all play a part.
Next
comes a rolling programme to overhaul the nation's heat-leaking
building stock. This will have the benefit of massively cutting
emissions and at the same time tackling the sore of fuel poverty by
creating better insulated and designed homes. A transition from "one
person, one car" on the roads, to a variety of clean reliable forms of
public transport should be visible by the middle of our 100 months.
Similarly, weaning agriculture off fossil-fuel dependency will be a
phased process.
The end result will be real international
leadership, removing the excuses of other nations not to act. But it
will also leave the people of Britain more secure in terms of the food
and energy supplies, and with a more resilient economy capable of
weathering whatever economic and environmental shocks the world has to
throw at us. Each of these challenges will draw on things that we
already know how to do, but have missed the political will for.
So,
there, I have said "Fire", and pointed to the nearest emergency exit.
Now it is time for the government to lead, and do its best to make sure
that neither a bang, nor a whimper ends the show.
· Andrew
Simms is policy director and head of the climate change programme at
NEF (the new economics foundation). The material on climate models for
this article was prepared by Dr Victoria Johnson, researcher at NEF on
climate change. For regular suggestions for what individuals and groups
can do to take action, and links to a wide range of organisations
supporting the focus on the 100 months countdown, go to: onehundredmonths.org. The Green New Deal can be downloaded at neweconomics.org
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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