Christian Science Monitor, October
11, 2007
A KEY THRESHOLD
CROSSED
[Rachel's introduction: An
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report to be released next
month will show that the rise in greenhouse-gases that scientists had hoped to
avert has already been surpassed.]
By Gregory M. Lamb
In Ray
Bradbury's science fiction novel "Fahrenheit 451," that number represented the
temperature at which books would burn, a symbol of a disturbing future under a
totalitarian government.
For climate scientists, a similar number, 450
parts per million (ppm), holds its own ominous meaning. It represents a
dangerous concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere; a total that they
were not expecting to be passed for at least another decade.
But a new
UN-sponsored report, to be released next month, will show that as of 2005 the
concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere had already reached 455 ppm,
according to Tim Flannery, a prominent Australian climate scientist who says
he's seen the raw data that go into the document.
In an interview on
Australian television this week, Dr. Flannery said that an Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report will show that carbon dioxide (CO2),
nitrous oxide, methane, hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), and other greenhouse gasses
are at much higher concentrations than previously thought. Reuters
quotes him:
"We thought we'd be at that threshold within about a
decade.... We thought we had that much time. But the new data indicates that in
about mid-2005 we crossed that threshold.... What the report establishes is that
the amount of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere is already above the threshold
that could potentially cause dangerous climate change."
About 75 percent
of the total ppm represents carbon dioxide, associated with burning fossil
fuels. The rest is a combination of the other gasses, he said.
On the
Sierra Club website, blogger Pat Joseph explains the meaning of 450 ppm:
"450 ppm has long been held up as
the threshold we dare not cross if we hope [to] avert the worst consequences of
warming. Well, if Flannery is right, (and there's no reason to think otherwise)
we crossed that line without even breaking stride."How did it happen? For one
thing, countries such as China and India are actually "recarbonizing," Mr.
Joseph says, meaning that their economies are becoming more energy-intensive "as
they turn increasingly to [greenhouse-gas emitting] coal to feed their growth."
[Blaming China and India for these problems is increasingly popular in the U.S.
press, we note. --Rachel's editors.]
In May, the IPCC estimated current concentration of greenhouse gases at only 425
ppm, said a BBC report at the time. It noted that many scientists equated
450 ppm with a 2 degree C (3.6 degrees Fahrehheit) rise in temperatures.
Allowing temperatures to rise more than 2 degrees C could lead to major impacts
on the environment, scientists said. In the article, Rajendra Pachauri, the
chairman of the IPCC, explained the strategy this way:
"If you want to
stabilise around 450 ppm, that means in a decade or two you have to start
reducing emissions far below the current level.... So in other words, we have a
very short window for turning around the trend we have in rising greenhouse gas
emissions. We don't have the luxury of time."
But, says Flannery, named
Australian of the Year for 2007, that window is closed. According to the
Australian Associated Press he says that higher figure is due to miscalculating
the potency of other greenhouse gasses, which are included in the 450 ppm figure
and measured in terms equivalent to that of CO2. But he adds:
"[A]lso we
have really seen an unexpected acceleration in the rate of accumulation of CO2
itself, and that's been beyond the limits of projection... beyond the worst-case
scenario. We are already at great risk of dangerous climate change -- that's
what the new figures say.... It's not next year, or next decade; it's
now."
A major UN climate change meeting in Bali, Indonesia, in December
aims to set a course toward a new global agreement to reduce greenhouse-gas
emissions. The current Kyoto Protocol, signed by the majority of the world's
nations but not the United States, expires in 2012. Flannery told Reuters that
the 450 ppm figure adds to the urgency and importance of that
meeting.
Meanwhile, Erwin Jackson, policy director of the Climate
Institute, an Australian environmental group, told the Australian Associated
Press that reducing greenhouse gas levels would be the only path to avoiding
a catastrophe:
"The longer we stay above the kind of levels we're at
at the moment, the more likely it is that we would start to see the loss of the
Great Barrier Reef; you would actually start see the collapse of the great ice
sheets and places like the Amazon starting to burn down."
Copyright 2007
The Christian Science Monitor