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Beyond the point of no return

It's too late to stop climate change, argues Ross Gelbspan -- so what do we do now?

Posted by Guest author (Guest Contributor) at 4:03 AM on 11 Dec 2007

This is a guest essay from Ross Gelbspan, who's retired from a 30-year career as an editor and reporter at The Philadelphia Bulletin, The Washington Post, and The Boston Globe. He is author of The Heat Is On and Boiling Point, and he maintains the website heatisonline.org.

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Photo: iStockphoto

As the pace of global warming kicks into overdrive, the hollow optimism of climate activists, along with the desperate responses of some of the world's most prominent climate scientists, is preventing us from focusing on the survival requirements of the human enterprise.

The environmental establishment continues to peddle the notion that we can solve the climate problem.

We can't.

We have failed to meet nature's deadline. In the next few years, this world will experience progressively more ominous and destabilizing changes. These will happen either incrementally -- or in sudden, abrupt jumps.

Under either scenario, it seems inevitable that we will soon be confronted by water shortages, crop failures, increasing damages from extreme weather events, collapsing infrastructures, and, potentially, breakdowns in the democratic process itself.

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Start with the climate activists, who are telling us only a partial truth.

Virtually all of the national and grassroots climate groups are pushing hard to reduce carbon emissions. The most aggressive are working to change America's entire energy structure from one based on coal and oil to a new energy future based on noncarbon technologies -- as they should.

The Step It Up campaign inspired more than 1,500 protests in all 50 states this year, and is hoping to build on that impact by joining forces with the 1Sky climate campaign. The Campus Climate Challenge is planning a new and more energetic clean energy campaign. Focus the Nation continues to exhort colleges and universities around the country to green their campuses. Al Gore's dedication to bringing the climate crisis to public attention won him a well-deserved Nobel Prize, and he's using his newfound credibility to push even harder for action against climate change. The large Washington-based environmental groups are pressing to improve climate and energy bills that are moving through Congress -- even though the bills are clearly inadequate to the challenge before us.

But even assuming the wildest possible success of their initiatives -- that humanity decided tomorrow to replace its coal- and oil-burning energy sources with noncarbon sources -- it would still be too late to avert major climate disruptions. No national energy infrastructure can be transformed within a decade.

All these initiatives address only one part of the coming reality. They recall the kind of frenzied scrambling that is characteristic of trauma victims -- a frantic focus on other issues, any other issues -- that allows people to avoid the central take-home message of the trauma: in this case, the overwhelming power of inflamed nature.

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Within the last two years, a number of leading scientists -- including Rajendra Pachauri, head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), British ecologist James Lovelock, and NASA scientist James Hansen -- have all declared that humanity is about to pass or already has passed a "tipping point" in terms of global warming. The IPCC, which reflects the findings of more than 2,000 scientists from over 100 countries, recently stated that it is "very unlikely" that we will avoid the coming era of "dangerous climate change."

The truth is that we may already be witnessing the early stages of runaway climate change in the melting of the Arctic, the increase in storm intensity, the accelerating extinctions of species, and the prolonged nature of recurring droughts.

Moreover, some scientists now fear that the warming is taking on its own momentum -- driven by internal feedbacks that are independent of the human-generated carbon layer in the atmosphere.

Consider these examples:

  • Despite growing public awareness of global warming, the world's carbon emissions are rising nearly three times faster than they did in the 1990s. As a result, many scientists tell us that the official, government-sanctioned forecasts of coming changes are understating the threat facing the world.

  • A rise of 2 degrees C over preindustrial temperatures is now virtually inevitable, according to the IPCC, as the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide is approaching the destabilizing level of 450 parts per million. That rise will bring drought, hunger, disease, and flooding to millions of people around the world.

  • Scientists predict a steady rise in temperatures beginning in about two years -- with at least half of the years between 2009 and 2019 surpassing the average global temperature in 1998, to date, the hottest year on record.

  • Given the unexpected speed with which Antarctica is melting, coupled with the increasing melt rates in the Arctic and Greenland, the rate of sea-level rise has doubled -- with scientists now raising their prediction of ocean rise by century's end from about three feet to about six feet.

  • Scientists discovered that a recent, unexplained surge of carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere is due to more greenhouse gases escaping from trees, plants, and soils -- which have traditionally buffered the warming by absorbing the gases. In the lingo of climate scientists, carbon sinks are turning into carbon sources. Because the added warmth is making vegetation less able to absorb our carbon emissions, scientists expect the rate of warming to jump substantially in the coming years.

  • The intensity of hurricanes around the world has doubled in the last decade. As Greg Holland of the National Center for Atmospheric Research explained, "If you take the last 10 years, we've had twice the number of category-5 hurricanes than any other [10-year period] on record."

  • In Australia, a new, permanent state of drought in the country's breadbasket has cut crop yields by over 30 percent. The 1-in-1,000-year drought exemplifies a little-noted impact of climate change. As the atmosphere warms, it tightens the vortex of the winds that swirl around the poles. One result is that the water that traditionally evaporated from the Southern Ocean and rained down over New South Wales is now being pulled back into Antarctica -- drying out the southeastern quadrant of Australia and contributing to the buildup of glaciers in the Antarctic -- the only area on the planet where glaciers are increasing.

As one prominent climate scientist said recently, "We are seeing impacts today that we did not expect to see until 2085."[1]

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The panic among climate scientists is expressing itself in geoengineering proposals that are half-baked, fantastically futuristic, and, in some cases, reckless. Put forth by otherwise sober and respected scientists, the schemes are intended to basically allow us to continue burning coal and oil.

Nobel Laureate Paul Crutzen, for example, is proposing to spray aerosols into the upper atmosphere to reduce the amount of sunlight hitting earth. Tom M. L. Wigley, a highly esteemed climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), ran scenarios of stratospheric sulfate injection -- on the scale of the estimated 10 million tons of sulfur emitted when Mt. Pinatubo erupted in 1991 -- through supercomputer models of the climate, and reported that Crutzen's idea would, indeed, seem to work. The scheme was highlighted in a recent op-ed piece in The New York Times by Ken Caldeira, a climate researcher at the Carnegie Institution.

Unfortunately, the seeding of the atmosphere with sun-reflecting particles would trigger a global drought, according to a study by other researchers. "It is a Band-Aid fix that does not work," said study co-author Kevin Trenberth of NCAR. The eruption of Pinatubo was followed by a significant drop-off of rainfall over land and a record decrease in runoff and freshwater discharge into the ocean, according to a recently published study by Trenberth and other scientists.

The noted British ecologist James Lovelock recently proposed the idea of installing deepwater pipes on the ocean floor to pump cold water to the surface to enhance the ocean's ability to absorb carbon dioxide. Others suggest dumping iron filings into the ocean to increase the growth of algae which, in turn, would absorb more carbon dioxide.

These proposals fail to seriously acknowledge the possibility of unanticipated impacts on ocean dynamics or marine ecosystems or atmospheric conditions. We have no idea what would result from efforts to geoengineer our way around nature's roadblock.

At a recent conference, Lisa Speer of the Natural Resources Defense Council noted, "These types of proposals are multiplying around the world, and there is no structure in place to evaluate if any of them work. People are going after these gigantic projects without any thoughtful, rational process."

What these scientists are offering us are technological expressions of their own supercharged sense of desperation.

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To be fair, the reality that faces us all is extremely difficult to deal with -- as much from an existential as from a scientific point of view.

Climate change won't kill all of us -- but it will dramatically reduce the human population through the warming-driven spread of infectious disease, the collapse of agriculture in traditionally fertile areas, and the increasing scarcity of fresh drinking water. (Witness the 1-in-100-year drought in the southeastern U.S., which has been threatening drinking water supplies in Georgia and other states.)

Those problems will be dramatically intensified by an influx of environmental refugees whose crops are destroyed by weather extremes or whose freshwater sources have dried up or whose homelands are going under from rising sea levels.

In March, the U.S. Army War College sponsored a conference on the security implications of climate change. "Climate change is a national security issue," retired General Gordon R. Sullivan, chair of the Military Advisory Board and former Army chief of staff, said in releasing a report that grew out of the conference. "[C]limate instability will lead to instability in geopolitics and impact American military operations around the world."

One frequently overlooked potential casualty of accelerating climate change may be our tradition of democracy (corrupted as it already is). When governments have been confronted by breakdowns, they have frequently resorted to totalitarian measures to keep order in the face of chaos. It is not hard to imagine a state of emergency morphing into a much longer state of siege, especially since heat-trapping carbon dioxide stays in the atmosphere for about 100 years.

Add the escalating squeeze on our oil supplies, which could intensify our meanest instincts, and you have the ingredients for a long period of repression and conflict.

Ominously, this plays into the scenario, thoughtfully explored by Naomi Klein, that the community of multinational corporations will seize on the coming catastrophes to elbow aside governments as agents of rescue and reconstruction -- but only for communities that can afford to pay. This dark vision implies the increasing insulation of the world's wealthy minority from the rest of humanity -- buying protection for their fortressed communities from the Halliburtons, Bechtels, and Blackwaters of the world while the majority of the poor are left to scramble for survival among the ruins.

The only antidote to that kind of future is a revitalization of government -- an elevation of public mission above private interest and an end to the free-market fundamentalism that has blinded much of the American public with its mindless belief in the divine power of markets. In short, it requires a revival of a system of participatory democracy that reflects our collective values far more accurately than the corporate state into which we have slid.

Unfortunately, we seem to be living in an age of historical amnesia. One wonders whether our institutional memory still recalls the impulses that gave rise to our constitution -- or whether we have substituted a belief in efficiency, economic rationalization, and profit maximization for our traditional pursuit of a finely calibrated balance between individual liberties and social justice.

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From a more personal viewpoint, an acknowledgement of the reality of escalating climate change plays havoc with one's sense of future. It is almost as though a lone ocean voyager were suddenly to lose sight of the North Star. It deprives one of an inner sense of navigation. To live without at least an open-ended sense of future (even if it's not an optimistic one) is to open one's self to a morass of conflicting impulses -- from the anticipated thrill of a reckless plunge into hedonism to a profoundly demoralizing sense of hopelessness and a feeling that a lifelong guiding sense of purpose has suddenly evaporated.

This slow-motion collapse of the planet leaves us with the bitterest kind of awakening. For parents of young children, it provokes the most intimate kind of despair. For people whose happiness derives from a fulfilling sense of achievement in their work, this realization feels like a sudden, violent mugging. For those who feel a debt to all those past generations who worked so hard to create this civilization we have enjoyed, it feels like the ultimate trashing of history and tradition. For anyone anywhere who truly absorbs this reality and all that it implies, this realization leads into the deepest center of grief.

There needs to be another kind of thinking that centers neither on the profoundly dishonest denial promoted by the coal and oil industries, nor the misleading optimism of the environmental movement, nor the fatalistic indifference of the majority of people who just don't want to know.

There needs to be a vision that accommodates both the truth of the coming cataclysm and the profoundly human need for a sense of future.

That vision needs to be framed by the truly global nature of the problem. It starts with the recognition that this historical era of nationalism has become a stubborn, increasingly toxic impediment to our collective future. We all need to begin to think of ourselves -- now -- as citizens of one profoundly distressed planet.

I think that understanding involves a recognition that a clean environment is about far more than endangered species, toxic substances, and the "dead zones" that keep spreading off our shorelines. A clean environment is a basic human right. And without it, all the other human rights for which we have worked so hard will end up as grotesque caricatures of some of our deepest aspirations.

Fortuitously, the timing of the climate crisis does coincide with other worldwide trends. Like it or not, the economy is becoming globalized. The globalization of communications now makes it possible for anyone to communicate with anyone else anywhere else in the world. And, since it is no respecter of national boundaries, the global climate makes us one.

At the same time, the coming changes clearly suggest that, to the extent possible, we should be eating locally and regionally grown food -- to minimize the CO2 generated by factory farming and long-distance food transport. We should also be preparing to take our energy from a decentralized system using whichever noncarbon energy technologies are best suited to their natural surroundings -- solar in sunny areas, offshore wave and tidal power in coastal areas, wind farms in the world's wind corridors, and geothermal almost everywhere. (It may even be feasible to maintain a low-level coal-fired grid, of about 15 percent of current capacity, as a back-up for days the wind doesn't blow or the sun doesn't shine.) But it's critical to stop thinking in terms of centralized energy systems and to begin thinking in terms of localized, decentralized technologies.

At the level of social organization, the coming changes imply the need to conduct something like 80 percent of our governance at the local grassroots level through some sort of consensual democratic process -- with the remaining 20 percent conducted by representatives at the global level.

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For some years, I have been promoting a policy bundle of three specific strategies as one model for jump-starting a global transition to clean energy. Those policies, which are spelled out in my book Boiling Point and on my website, include:

  • Redirecting more than $250 billion in subsidies in industrial countries away from coal and oil and putting them behind carbon-free technologies;

  • Creating a fund of about $300 billion a year for a decade, to transfer clean energy to poor countries; and

  • Adopting within the Kyoto framework a mandatory progressive fossil-fuel efficiency standard that would go up by 5 percent a year until the 80 percent global reduction is attained.

The initial impulse behind these strategies was to craft a policy bundle to stabilize the climate -- and at the same time create millions of jobs, especially in developing countries. Initially, I, along with the other people who helped formulate them, envisioned these solutions as a way to undermine the economic desperation that gives rise to so much anti-U.S. sentiment. They would, we hoped, turn impoverished and dependent countries into trading partners. They would raise living standards abroad without compromising ours. They would jump the renewable energy industry into a central driving engine of growth for the global economy and, ultimately, yield a far more equitable, more secure, and more prosperous world.

Unfortunately, given all the apathy, indifference, and antagonism to taking real action, nature has now relegated that earlier vision to the rear-view mirror.

But this kind of global public-works plan, if initiated in the near term, could still provide a platform to bring the people of the world together around a common global project that transcends traditional alliances and national antagonisms -- even in today's profoundly fractured, degraded, and combative world. Along the way, it could also provide decentralized stand-alone energy sources for disconnected social communities in a post-crash world.

The key to our survival as a civil species during an era of profound natural upheaval lies in an enhanced sense of community. If we maintain the fiction that we can thrive as isolated individuals, we will find ourselves at the same emotional dead end as the current crop of survivalists: an existence marked by defensiveness, mistrust, suspicion, and fear.

As nature washes away our resources, overwhelms our infrastructures, and splinters our political alignments, our survival will depend increasingly on our willingness to join together as a global community. As the former Argentine climate negotiator, Raul Estrada-Oyuela, said, "We are all adrift in the same boat -- and there's no way half the boat is going to sink."[2]

To keep ourselves afloat, we need to change the economic and political structures that determine how we behave. In this case, we need to elevate the ethic of cooperation over the deeply ingrained reflex of competition. We need to elevate our biological similarities over our geographical differences. We need, in the face of this oncoming onslaught, to reorganize our social structures to reflect our most humane collective aspirations.

There is no body of expertise -- no authoritative answers -- for this one. We are crossing a threshold into uncharted territory. And since there is no precedent to guide us, we are left with only our own hearts to consult, whatever courage we can muster, our instinctive dedication to a human future -- and the intellectual integrity to look reality in the eye.

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Footnotes:

[1] Author's conversation with Dr. Paul Epstein, of the Center for Health and the Global Environment of Harvard Medical School, September, 2006.

[2] Raul Estrada-Oyuela, Argentine negotiator, at the U.N Convention on Climate Change in Kyoto, Japan, December, 1997.

At last one of the climate gurus

answers a question I have always had. What do we do if we miss the witching hour that is projected out into the next ten years.  

Scary, but at least someone is thinking the unthinkable.

Randy Cunningham

Randy Cunningham

how long does CO2 stay in the atmosphere?

"heat-trapping carbon dioxide stays in the atmosphere for about 100 years."

Co2 stays in the atmosphere as long as it takes a process to take it out - it doesn't leave the atmosphere of its own accord.
Since the main natural mechanisms for CO2 removal are all under threat from global warming (in no particular order: solution in seawater, plankton, forests, etc.), 100 years may be a bit optimistic. After these mechanisms have failed it is down to rocks to absorb the CO2 on time-scales way longer than those that measure human civilisation.

Another point: You say that in 2 years the temperature will rise steadily. At what point will it level off?

All in all a good article - one that needed to be written - thanks.

Let's wreck the world slower

Ross, one of the big reasons for inaction is that the vision was partial and as you say, dishonest. We can't fix the problem with by reducing emissions alone. Yet the pretense that we might continues. It's hard to enlist people into the movement if your vision is, "let's wreck the world slower."

Most continue to ignore or dismiss comprehensive solutions (e.g. Allan Yeomans's book PRIORITY ONE: TOGETHER WE CAN BEAT GLOBAL WARMING). This is a reflection of our science, which has been focused on things, events, and technology rather than biospheric processes such as the carbon cycle, and the importance of soil organic matter. It is also a reflection of our resolute but misguided focus on technology as both cause and solution to the climate issue.

Global warming is BOTH a technological issue (fossil fuel emissions) and a land management issue (soil organic matter). If we look at only one side, as Ross Gelbspan does, the outlook is very negative, and there is not much reason for action.

Peter Donovan
http://managingwholes.net

soilcarboncoalition.org

Is it not a little early in the game to be saying

.......... the game is already decided?

It seems like only yesterday the prevailing view was global warming was a hoax, as ideological groups fraudently mislead the public by discrediting good science, spreading uncertainty and manufacturing controversy, all for the purpose of support the specious idea that the global economy can grow infinitely without damaging the Earth's ecosystems or dissipating our planetary home's limited resources.  A hoax has surely been perpetrated on the public, but not the one we have been hearing about for 30 years.

Steven Earl Salmony, Ph.D., M.P.A.
AWAREness Campaign on The Human Population
http://sustainabilitysoutheast.org/

Ross, we need to spend trillions...

of dollars, not billions.  If indeed we face an emergency on the order of World War II, then we need to start proposing solutions commensurate with the level of crisis.  

I'm glad that you're talking about concrete goals, like localized agriculture and the spread of renewable technologies.  As I argued in "Global warming and the vision thing",, numeric goals have their use, but actual plans for how to make the society sustainable -- say, by blanketing buildings with solar panels, constructing high-speed intercity trains and light rail, just putting up wind farms wherever we can -- is easier for people to envision, and best of all, we know that those solutions will work.

Which leads to spending at least one trillion dollars a year in the US -- and I think we should be talking about the developed world creating a trillion dollar a year fund for the developing world, to move this as quickly as possible.  The problem is that centers of power in this country would have to pay much more for their share than currently -- specifically, the military, super-rich, and large corporations.

While obviously spending $350 billion a year, as you suggest,  would be an incredible improvement, that's still about the pace of our spending on the Iraq war.  If the world is in as much trouble as you say, then we need something closer to World War II.  And you also identified one of the main challenges to doing so -- the free market fundamentalism that is used to try to checkmate spending huge amounts, now.  

You seem to be heading in the same direction as Richard Heinberg and Carolyn Baker, that is, a very loud warning that we are in very big trouble and we better do something fast, and I think you're the first well-known climate change journalist to do so.  So I hope that the global warming and peak oil activists can move together, because the solutions are basically the same.

Very very serious and threatening... and

Still not a binary "deadline". A reduction is still a reduction. There are still potential carbon uptake mechanisms based on agriculture, river run off, etc that can affect the equation. With millions of people threatened, will coal trains fail to arrive on time? It could start happening.

Less is still less, better is still better. Keep breathing everybody!

The problem is a little bigger than this

As energy supplies begin to shrink over the next decade or so due to the depletion of oil and natural gas, national GDPs will decline around the globe.  The impact will be especially severe in regions that are already under threat from Climate Chaos and population growth.

This will preclude the expenditure of the amounts required to deal with the wide variety of problems we'll be facing in a couple of decades: energy shortfalls, Climate Chaos and food shortages.  While different regions of the world will face different mixes of problems as a result, it's safe to say that no region will be spared some form of extreme difficulty.

The reference to Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine" is especially apropos.  The reactions of the corporatist powers-that-be to the prospect of this looming multi-dimensional global crisis was the first thing I thought of when I read the book.  They'll be like kids in a candy store.  To make matters worse, citizens around the world will be clamouring for a "strong hand" to guide them through the troubled seas.  I am sure there will be no shortage of willing volunteers for the role of (ahem) benevolent dictator.

It's not at all clear to me that there is anything effective to be done except prepare for the most likely hardships within your own global region.  Adaptation to the effects of this combinatorial crisis seems to be the approach with the highest probability of success.  Basically, it's, "All hands to the lifeboats, women and children first."

For a close look at how energy depletion is going to affect national economies, read this analysis:

World Energy to 2050 and
Energy Intensity and GDP in 2050: To Have or Have Not


Yeah, but so what?

I appreciate the perspective that this article presents, and I can't deny that he might be right, and we have passed the point of no return.  Although exactly what "the point of no return" means in this case is unclear: we have certainly passed the point where we could escape all the impacts of climate change, and we probably have not reached the point where climate change will inevitably destroy civilization (and anyone who says we have, for sure, reached that point is claiming knowledge that no one could possibly have).  So we're somewhere in the grey middle zone.  And the future is going to suck, we just don't know how badly.

But the point of my somewhat flip subject remains.  From the perspective of the folks who are already active, already aware, and already working the problem, so what?  We need to localize, decentralize, and decarbonize.  Great.  We (the activists) are pushing just that agenda.  If in order to get buy-in from the public, we need to paint a rosy picture of the carbon-neutral future, fine, so be it.  If the future sucks four times as hard as we say it will, so what?  It'll still suck less if the world moves in the direction that we're trying to push it, than if it does not.

And from the point of the general public, again, is this really productive?  We're not going to enlist the masses of the uninvolved, the apathetic, or those in denial by talking about how bad the future is going to be.  If humans were rational, we would respond to that sort of talk because the followup is how much worse things will be if we do nothing.  But people are not rational in that way.  Focusing on a terrible, tragic future won't get any of those folks on board.

I can see one segment that might potentially be reached by this sort of talk: the folks who are aware of the problem, but who have not internalized the scale of it; and the folks who are aware of the problem, but think that we can technology our way out of it.  For them, a reality check like this may force them to choose between retreating into denial or getting serious about prioritizing an appropriate response to the situation in their personal and business decisions.  If they have enough intellectual honesty that they can't backpedal from awareness into denial, then this perspective could be valuable.

Don't get me wrong.  I think it's a good essay.  I think it's also likely more true than not.  But I'm not sure that it's a useful or constructive truth in most contexts, and I think it's a harmful truth in some: it encourages those in denial to remain in denial, and it encourages those who are aware of the problem to give in to despair.

The world will be fine without Gelbspan

... just as it survived H.G. Wells, despite the latter's confidence that it would not, or at any rate probably hadn't better.

Gelbspan's acknowledgment of geo-engineering proposals that promise not to work well, and failure to acknowledge silicate-to-carbonate sequestration, can reasonably be taken as evidence that he knows of no reason that it wouldn't work well. No-one does.

--- G.R.L. Cowan, hydrogen-to-boron convert
How shall the car gain nuclear cachet?
http://www.eagle.ca/~gcowan/boron_blast.html

Now You Know Why I Fear The Activists


I agree with the premise.   The biggest detriment to the current situation is the "climate activists".  They are spitting in the wind and taking a lot of attention in the wrong direction.

Climate change is inevitable, because it's caused by nature not by man.   Therefore, we can only focus on our response to it.

And that response can be innovative.  There are numerous opportunities that will come from warming.  Already we are seeing reduced need for heating due to increased temperatures.   There will be more fresh water available from the meltdown and more rain.   There will be more arable land.  People will be able to live comfortably in more places than ever before in history.


why is NRDC supporting wilderness destruction?

you say, and i have been screaming this for 10 years, that we must focus on DECENTRALIZED, local renewable energy (i assume a la residential solar, wind and aggressive conservation, including steeply tiered energy bills).

so why is NRDC (and Sierra Club) supporting total wilderness annihilation in support of massive new REMOTE GENERATION AND TRANSMISSION projects, over 600,000 acres of which are currently already in process?

both organizations have refused to press for meaningful conservation reforms, or for affordable residential PV systems, while cheerleading for irreversible habitat decimation which keeps utilities' chokeholds on ratepayers and privatizes profits while socializing the costs?

destroying the planet is NOT GREEN and it SHOULD NOT BE FREE.  McMansions need to pay the true cost of their gluttony, so why is LADWP continuing to outsource their garbage, smog, "green power," and water stealing?  www.stopgreenpath.com

the greenest energy is that which you needn't ever produce.

bummer

This article kind of makes me want to go home, eat a handful of xanax and stare at a wall for a while.  It is very true that the climate crisis' potential scale for devastation is almost incomprehensible.  I think over the past few years I have actually experienced a few episodes of debillitating grief and depression because of it.  The  mantra of, "What the hell am I supposed to do now?" continues to echo in my head.  I can stop driving (I have already minimized driving) and I can buy only local food (organic or not) and I can stop buying useless plastic crap at wal-mart (not really all that hard to do) and if all of my countrymen and fellow humans follow in kind we are still fucked.  Sobering isn't really the word for it.

Gore's Nobel acceptance comments . . .

are an appropriate response to Ross, a dear old friend whose work on climate has been seminal to my own.  Here are some that are particularly on the mark:

"We, the human species, are confronting a planetary emergency - a threat to the survival of our civilization that is gathering ominous and destructive potential even as we gather here. But there is hopeful news as well: we have the ability to solve this crisis and avoid the worst - though not all - of its consequences, if we act boldly, decisively and quickly."

"It is time to make peace with the planet. We must quickly mobilize our civilization with the urgency and resolve that has previously been seen only when nations mobilized for war.

"Make no mistake, the next generation will ask us one of two questions. Either they will ask: `What were you thinking; why didn't you act?' Or they will ask instead: `How did you find the moral courage to rise and successfully resolve a crisis that so many said was impossible to solve?'"

"We have everything we need to get started, save perhaps political will, but political will is a renewable resource. So let us renew it, and say together: `We have a purpose. We are many. For this purpose we will rise, and we will act.'"

Fuller excerpts along this line at http://www.climatesolutions.org/?s=journal&aid=30


Patrick Mazza

Re: Bummer

Look on the bright side of it.  Some of us have seen this coming and experienced your pain since the late 60s.  So be happy that you have just had a few years of grief.  

The New Yorker magazine has some great environmental cartoons.  I'll share a few that I can remember (without the cartoons of course).  

Couple women standing at a bar together: "I hate to admit it, but a man with a big carbon footprint makes me hot."

An amphibian emerges from his evolutionary journey from water to land and sees a sign on shore:
"The beginning is near."

A down looking fellow sitting on a couch with a cell phone to his head: "Making a difference doesn't make a difference."

So, to any of you optimistic climate activists who have read this post, all I can say is thanks for trying and don't worry about "preventing us from focusing on the survival requirements of the human enterprise" (bit of a stretch IMHO).  

Beyond the point of no return

The consequences have begun and are accelerating. We can act to reduce their impact - the questions become what can we do and what should we do. I believe the answers to those questions should include equal consideration for habitats and species for their own sake and not just for their benefit to humanity.

I would like discussions and solutions to include consideration of the needs of humanity, habitat, and species as equal participants and with their own rights to survival.  I am afraid that humanity, in its ongoing quest for survival and dominance, will continue to place itself above habitat and species to the detriment of all.

James E. Haklik Phoenix, Arizona

More water from meltdown?!

John Bailo writes:

There will be more fresh water available from the meltdown

Um, not in places like the Andes, which traditionally relies on meltwater from snowpack for water during the dry season. They are witnessing the prospect of those snowpacks disappearing within the next few years, leaving them high and dry for months at a time.

As Scripps Institution's Tim Barnett describes the dilemma in this summary of a recent study published in Nature:

"When you change the seasonality of how rivers flow you are essentially putting the water runoff all into spring rather than being able to draw it out through summer. Mother nature is not going to act like a reservoir as it has in the past and when the water comes out all at once there isn't enough capacity to contain it."

These are only my personal opinions.

In the end...

We may not be able to stop global climate change in its entirety, but we can try to slow it down and minimize it as much as possible.  You're right in saying even if we all switched over to clean and green energy tommorrow the change would still occur...but at least it wouldn't be as drastic as it would be if just shrugged it off and continued to pollute anyway.

In the end, the problem will start to become so apparent, that will probably (much too late, but better than never) force a huge and very sudden world-wide movement that'll mandate conservation and clean technology.  The damage already done by climate change and that'll occur in the future will haveta be offset by human-engineered innovations...dikes, locks, water diversions, cloud seedings, movement of species into captivity until they can be relocated, migration, dredging, land raising, etc.

All of which will be highly controversial, expensive, taxing, and in some cases (though not all) probably ineffective for the most part.  And definetly inferior to the alternative of having tried to deal with the problem from the start and be on clean energy by now.

But since we can't go back in time and fix our mistakes (at least, not without inadvertantly having evolved apes take over the world, it seems), then it's our responsibility to try and minimize the impact as much as possible in a way that's as eco-friendly as possible, all while tryin' to stop any additional GHGs and pollution from occuring.

Focus the Nation on what is possible

The heroic challenge for today's young people is to decarbonize the global economy by 2050-- if they do that, then there is a decent chance to hold global warming to the low end of 3-4 degrees F, and stabilize the clmate.  While Ross is right that their world will be a different, and in many ways, difficult place, it will not be an unrecognizable place. This is what stopping global warming means, and it is still possible to do this. Focus the Nation-- taking place on over a thousand campuses and other institutions next January 31st-- is focusing the country on this heroic task.

To provide todays college kids with the tools to stabilize the climate, our generation needs to do two things in the next couple of years: freeze and begin to cut emissions, and invest around $25 billion a year in clean energy technologies, so that in the year 2020, solar cells and geothermal and sustainable biofuels technologies will be cheap enough to enable the coming generation to "rewire the entire world" (that's Ross's line and I use it all the time) with these technologies, and lay the foundation for a sustainable and prosperous future-- albeit on a hotter planet.

If we don't take those actions in the next few years, then the 3-4 degree F window closes, and our kids will be looking-- at best-- at a 4-5 degree F window. And of course, every .1 degree F raises the probability that we may cross some threshhold that will initiate catastrohic changes of the kind Ross discusses.

Is it already too late to preserve a habitable world for our kids and grandkids? I don't think any of us knows. But I do know that tens of thousands of volunteers who are working to build Focus the Nation on their campuses and communities are choosing to act as if it is not.

ugh -


there are too many really BIG energy issues out there to wrap a brain around. here's one that bothers me often -

what about all the coal plants everywhere?? the coal proponents in the US are certainly fighting a good rear-guard action to keep coal usage in place. and the myth of liquid coal is still a popular topic among people with money to invest!

and again, i say, what about coal??!! China has SO MANY coal plants running their country, polluting their own country, and countries far away alike. they couldn't possibly close them all down anytime soon and replace them with what? China would go back into the dark ages.....i don't think they would sign up for that....

and the Climate talks in Bali aren't going well. the US is going to just take it's marbles away and go home....how to organize the planet?

energetic, positive, climate activists may be just 'spitting in the wind', but at least they are facing the wind. most of us just turn our backs away. i face the wind, but have no idea what to do, apart from small, personal changes. so depressing.

Planning for a hot time on Planet Earth

Hi, Ross,

Thanks for your views and I see Eban has posted, feels like homecoming at GreenHouseNet.org.

Lester Brown's books Plan B 3.0 (just released) and Outgrowing the Earth are both sources of solid research and level headed ideas. Check Lester's work out at www.earthpolicy.org.

For the past almost three years I have been working to promote EcoCover.  More information at www.roncastle.com/ecocover  The first manufacturing plant in North America will be coming to the USA Summer 2008.  A new plant is starting up in Australia next week.  The Czech Republic plant starts up in February.

What we have discovered about EcoCover from two years of research is that in addition to the positive plant growth and water conservation properties of this family of organically certified paper mulch mats made mainly from waste paper, is that the use of EcoCover to muclh agricultural and horticultural crops has a siginficant carbon sequestration benefit.  When we replace 30 million acres of plastic used for mulch around the world every year, the carbon benefits will be quite large.  There will be other solutions coming.  We are a small part at this point but are going to be a major player in a couple of years.

If you search on Google for agriculture future trends you will find a page in my website number one.  Localization is going to be essential.

We are already working on our own localization plans along with a self-sufficiency plan for the kiddos and grand kiddos.  We have made in the past 10 years a very large change in lifestyle by choice.  Change by choice can be a fun adventure.  Check out www.nealcreekfarm.com, about 13 miles from your good friend Jack Daniels.

I think the future is going to be very challenging, but I don't plan on sitting around and whining about it.  We will do the best with what we have and keep on innovating.  When Global Warming Bush leaves office, I expect a major change in politics that will finally make a difference.  Morons be gone.

This may be the most creative time in man's history on the planet?  I think so.  Survival is a great motivator.

Cheers.

It starts with the individual

It will only be with the individual. It always has been. Each individual, making themselves aware and doing what that individual can do, makes the biggest impact.

It's not going to reach government level faster than that. They don't believe that people mean it. The car companies and investment companies don't believe us because we aren't acting like we mean it. It's not going to become a part of every moment of every day until that exists. Take it into yourself and live it.

That's the change.

Then find others that are the same. Learn to co-operate and communicate. Become good at bypassing the things that we believe are normal routes of action and communication.

Pay           attention        now.

That's the difference for today and tomorrow. Start with you.

Tom Byrne Illustration http://www.tombyrne.com Tom Byrne Paintings http://www.tjbyrne.com

Wow

I have studied this issue for many years, reading everything I can find on the subject, including all the IPCC reports (not just the executive summaries).  I have yet to come across any credible evidence that increasing atmospheric CO2, man-made or otherwise, is causing global warming.  To the contrary, all of the research-backed theories that seem to explain past climate changes have nothing to do with CO2.  Since you all seem to be convinced that it is, maybe you can point me to some research to enlighten me.  So far, all this hype appears, in my view, to be based on computer models that are seriously flawed.

With a science and mathmatics background, I work in the Environmental Protection field.  There are plenty of issues such as stormwater management, erosion, use of pesticides (etc,), and poor development planning that need our attention.  So to waste time and huge amounts of resources on this doomsday scenario seems rather counter productive if you say you hold the environment in your best interest.  Overestimating the potential impacts from human emmissions is leading to rediculous actions such as building ethanol factories.  Come on, do we really want to put pollutants in the atmosphere and iron in the sea based on models that have proven to misrepresent the magnitude and direction of atmospheric feedback mechanisms?  The models, while incredibly sophisticated, still cannot handle the hydrologic cycle, for goodness sake.  And we're supposed to make massive investments in actions that will do little but make a few select companies that will control the market on carbon offsets hugely rich (hello Mr. Gore).

Can we get back to preserving open space, cleaning up our waterways, and supporting viable energy alternatives?  

We have met the enemy..

I certainly agree with the need for solving our climate change related problems at the local level.  Furthermore, each country needs to solve its own climate change related problems with the help of the international community if possisble and without migration (leaving your problems behind and bringing your unsustainable habits to new territory) to other countries unless agreed upon.

As Pogo said decades ago; " We have met the enemy and he is us".  This message unfortunately is so un-PC nowadays that no environmental organization  wants to admit that maybe our numbers have already become unsustainable and that the expected 50% increase in our human numbers by 2050 will only worsen the problems we already have.  The best investment we can make is in trying to immediately educate everyone as to the need for immediate population stabilization.  

The infant not born has a zero carbon footprint.

That is part of the solution...

Can we get back to preserving open space, cleaning up our waterways, and supporting viable energy alternatives?

That's part of the soultion to global warming.  Clean water, more natural and wilderness spaces, and clean alternative energy all help reduce GHG emissions.

In many ways, the global warming issue acts as a blanket that covers a host of other environmental issues.  By tackling global warming, we're also helping to tackle other environmental issues as well.

Let's get on with it!

A very powerful essay that hits all the right notes, at least for me!

Michael Klare has also written, I would say, a companion piece recently:

Overcoming the global warming problem won't be easy. In fact, it may prove the most difficult challenge humanity has ever faced. Its successful management will require a total transformation in the way we power and organize our cities, industries, farms, and transportation systems. This, in turn, will require the full attention, imagination, ingenuity, and determination of our leaders, scientists, engineers, farmers, and industrialists.

But he has some explicit advice for the Democrats regarding the Occupation:


So the Iraq War, for all its distinctive features, has to be seen in relation to the massive catastrophe of global climate change that is coming toward us at a terrifying pace. Like the peril of all-out nuclear war, this will constitute an ultimate threat to our nation's survival. If we had any sense at all, we would terminate the war as rapidly as possible, reject all war-related supplemental funding requests, dramatically cut our reliance on petroleum, and transfer massive funds from Iraq War accounts to research on alternative energy systems.


Human Nature and Multiple Stratigies

Thank you for a most thoughtful article and all the posts. I do not disagree with the content. I have some thoughts to offer from the perspective of an architect, wife, mother, former mayor,  pet owner, Prius driver etc. While I have times of sadness and despair when I think of the world my children are going to inherit, I take heart in that I am a part of a movement doing what we can to lessen the severity of that future.

Please know that the American Institute of Architects fully embraces the Architecture 2030 Challenge and will drag kicking and screaming any architects into reality that are trying to resist.I encourage any of you reading this, that belong to any type of organization, be it professional, collegiate, religious, social, whatever, that you consider doing as much a possible as a group. While I agree that individual action is necessary, more can be done when acting as a group. You can influence politics, consumer demand, educate etc. Try to focus on at least one area of expertise that you think you can really make a difference in and then go like a freight train and take everyone with you!

It is crucial that we acknowledge human nature in whatever we do, so that we use its power for change rather than slam up against a brick wall. Example, at GreenBuild there was a film on the progress of Green Building in China. Lots of laws are on the books but very little is happening. Only recycling has taken hold, because like here, the poor can make money at it. As key note speaker Pres. Clinton made clear, there is tremendous economic benefit in the labor and technology of going green. We need to stress that. I wish people would do the right thing because its right, but usually they do it to make money.

My last point, is that we must keep our minds open to all possibilities but also practice the precautionary principle. If we only implemented all the technologies we already have on a massive scale, we'd be there already. No one solution will solve this (none of you implied that but many folks look for that silver bullet.)For instance providing education for poor women and small grants to establish their own businesses has been shown to dramatically reduce their birthrate. I agree completely that we need to work on stabilizing population as a major part of reducing both consumption and pollution. Water issues, localizing energy sources thus eliminating transmission losses, increasing efficiencies, reducing waste and consumption are all going to be critical.

Don't feel alone and helpless. Find that group that can help you move forward more effectively and just go for it. Get elected or appointed to office and make policy changes. You can do it!

K. Austin

real enemy ignored

Lot's of nice words. Anyone ready to take on the real enemy? The private auto.

http://www.freepublictransit.org

Thank you

Thank you Ross, you were one of the writers that turned me on this movement (along with Jeremy Legett and RFK), and after three years of working hard to do something about it, I was getting burned out. This article totally re-energized, and frustrated , and, more importantly, radicalized me.

I sent it to all my friends and family, as, I believe, all of you should.

www.campusprogress.org

good summary Colin,

but as for all our 'leaders, scientists, engineers, farmers, and industrialists' working together, none of them are; they are all just squabbling among themselves and also squabbling with all the 'leaders, scientists, engineers, farmers, and industrialists' in every other country as well.

in fact, everyone is arguing, yelling, swearing, etc., at everyone else in this great climate debate; on Grist and on every other GREEN website out there - and also on all of the major news services sites and also everywhere.

it's either the start of something positively great or the start of the biggest fiasco seen since WWII!

i once read in a Terry Pratchett novel that humans are the 'story telling chimpanzee' evolved from  chimpanzees that were hanging around in trees yelling at other chimpanzees hanging out in other trees. cool.

( i apologize for using 'evolve' and 'chimpanzee' in the same sentence as the term 'human'. no offense meant to humans of other persuasions don't yell at me).

time to act, not despair

We are seeing signs of climate change and it's scary. The danger is to think it's all over now and nothing we can do matters. Gelbspan doesn't say that, but that's where people often go with despair.

There's only one area where I think Gelbspan has it wrong. Instead of going into it here I'll let Nat say it. We posted a response to Gelbspan's post on the Climate 411 blog:

http://environmentaldefenseblogs.org/climate411/2007/12/1 ...

Sheryl Canter
Environmental Defense

Yes but ...

Ross, I agree with most all of what you say, but, for me, the necessary punchline never quite came.  

The closest you got was when you said:


The only antidote to that kind of future is a revitalization of government -- an elevation of public mission above private interest and an end to the free-market fundamentalism that has blinded much of the American public with its mindless belief in the divine power of markets.

But the real key to this, I think, is when we take the next step as well and start talking about global community.  

You almost do this, too, when you say:


Fortuitously, the timing of the climate crisis does coincide with other worldwide trends. Like it or not, the economy is becoming globalized. The globalization of communications now makes it possible for anyone to communicate with anyone else anywhere else in the world. And, since it is no respecter of national boundaries, the global climate makes us one.

But you don't spell the implications in any detail at all.

Sitting here in Bali, waiting to go home to my wife and son (and yes, it's a real  problem knowing what to say and not say in front of him) it's painful to read anything as good as your screed that does not finally get down to geo-economic basics.  Or, for that matter, does not make the essential point that other people are actually trying to do just that.  But that we, in the guise our our government, are still hacking away, pursuing their frankly evil form of slash and burn republicanism.  

Still, once again, the good guys -- and there are so many -- almost outnumber them.  And (my point) we still have a shot at this.  But there's a storm coming.  There damn well better be.  Especially in the US.  We Americans may not, alone, have the power to tip this system into another regime, but we have a good deal of it.  

We need a global new deal.  And it's not going to happen unless Americans step up.  

I still thing that we're going to rise to the occasion.  But it's not going to be easy.  Because we have to start bay paying our share of the bill. Keep that in mind when you real the coming Bali post-morta, and they'll make a whole lot more sense.

-- toma

Tom Athanasiou toma@ecoequity.org

Mising the Point

Sheryl, I went to the link you provided and read the following summary of why Environmental Defense champions CO2 cap and trade.  

Nat said:

{We have proof that this works in the acid rain program. When we put a cap on sulfur dioxide (SO2), the cause of acid rain, the power sector and its suppliers came up with a range of technological innovations to meet the new limits. Some were relatively mundane - for example, figuring out how to burn low-sulfur Wyoming coal in boilers designed for high-sulfur coal from Illinois or West Virginia. Others were more dramatic. The prospect of a cap on SO2 prodded a team of GE engineers to figure out how to turn the waste from a "scrubber" into gypsum, which could be sold as a byproduct.]

I also have proof the Environmental Defense strategy to let the market place decide how to comply with the acid rain control program of the Clean Air Act caused the coal industry to rip apart the mountains of Central Appalachia.  

The Creator made the mistake of putting high quality, low sulfur coal in the mountain seams and that was where the coal and utility companies went to get their compliance coal in addition to the Northern Plains coal they shipped 1500 miles.

In 1985, Congressman Henry Waxman proposed taxing electric customers a very small fee that would be used to pay for sulfur dioxide pollution control.  It would have accomplished the same result as the Environmental Defense market-based approach but medium and high sulfur coal stripped from the Midwest relatively flat topography would have continued to be the fuel of choice of the polluting plant operators.

Had the Waxman approach been adopted, there would have been no need to spend the extra money to rip coal from the high Appalachian mountain seams.  

If you want hard evidence, use the US Dept. Of  Energy's Form 423 which provides the quantity, quality and source of coal purchased by utilities going back to the early 1980s.  With a bit of effort, those tables quantify the shift of coal production from Illinois and Western Kentucky to the mountains of Virginia, West Virginia and Eastern Kentucky.

When I recently asked an Environmental Defense lobbyist to justify the ED approach to acid rain control,  he told me that mountaintop mining was an "unintended consequence".  

Yeah.  Go tell it to the mountains.


The Myth of Apathy

"Unfortunately, given all the apathy, indifference, and antagonism to taking real action, nature has now relegated that earlier vision to the rear-view mirror."

I am growing frustrated with a pervasive misconception within environmental sectors: this is the concept of apathy and indifference. I am not clear why there remains a lack of appreciation for the profound psychological dimensions of facing this sort of information and news. What we know from people working in clinical psychology for - how long? A hundred years? - that when faced with anxiety producing information or news, people often go into denial and other defenses. Further, when there is a sense of powerlessness, what appears on the surface as apathy is actually a highly complicated situation involving clear political engagement, despair, and hopelessness. I wish that those working on the front lines of these issues can begin to incorporate some sort of more nuanced understanding around how people respond to serious ecological threats. Until we do, I suspect we will indeed be spinning our wheels.

Apathy means an absence of feeling: a pathos. Without conviction or emotion. This is not an accurate portrait of how many in the American public response to environmental threats and the concept of peak oil. People do care; we have children, we feel the despair so eloquently expressed in this piece. But looking for 'actions' as signs of this caring is misguided. Most people, as I'm starting to find in my research, feel powerless and instead do nothing or small acts. A big issue. But it is not about indifference. let's try to work for more sophisticated understandings of how humans cope and respond to stressful information.

The Fruition of Strategy

If anyone can, please let me know how to contact Mr. Gelbspan.

I've been working on a keystone strategy to inject urgency into public and MSM discourse and build popular demand for a major first step through a daily video thesis project spanning 2008 (web media campaign) after 40 years of research; most intensive since 2002.

The approach and central idea are quite radical but timely and realistic -- made possible by Earth's new superpower status in the human consciousness, and the contrast between slow US traditions (political impotence, disunited activism) and the need for rapid responses.  

Would appreciate any assistance.

M.A. Candidate, Advanced Strategies for Peace & Diversity

Beyon the Pointof No Return

Gelbspan's advice made a big hit with me not only because so wise but because his fix -- strengthening communities -- is vital for all aspects of modern life. The reason is that most current ills, climate change of prominent note, were caused by automobiles and television. These have destroyed most communities. Rebuilding physically compact communities -- Gelbspan's advice -- therefore is the single most important tactic.

Intellectual property?

One of the USA's big delaying tactics was refusing to consider enabling technology transfer.

How many really good ideas for making things better have been patented -- and so locked up where none of the countries that really need them can implement them?

Ask yourself if you're controlling any technique or method or technology that could save the world if you gave it away instead of keeping it expensive.

note to greenpath

You correctly point out that corporate power has corrupted some (many?) "environmental" groups. Time is short. We have to rely on the people and build grassroots power. It can and must be done.

http://www.frepubtra.blogspot.com/

another point

Many thanks to Mr. Gelbspan for his relentlessly and refreshingly honest appraisal of what we face.  And I emphasize we.  
Perhaps a first step to creating more authentic communities around the globe is to more clearly recognize those of us who are on the front lines.  I'm a penguin so let me first remind you that while humans were bickering at Bali, a new report declared that four species of penguins were at peril.  But I could just as easily speak about polar bears or walruses or countless other non-human species who are being disappeared.
We, of course, know from experience how self-absorbed you can be.  But clearly this might be the last opportunity for you to see that how you treat us is ultimately - though perhaps too slowly for you to learn - how you will treat yourselves.
On behalf of penguins everywhere, I urge you all to struggle with renewed vigor and commitment.  Save the Ice.  Save the Earth.  Save our Home.
Thank you,
Penguin Eight
Penguins United
http://penguinsunited.com

We're Screwed.

Now that I've got your attention lets get to work.

  1. Find the biggest energy wasters and fix them. This probably involves data mining utility and heating oil bills for the biggest energy users on a given block. Invoke a "mandatory retrofit or disconnect" rule and then retrofit that house and every other house on that block for energy efficiency.

  2. The energy retrofits: replace whatever existing wasteful appliances or systems in the house with efficient systems. In dense neighborhoods bundle services for greater efficiency. Slap solar panels on whatever roofs they will work on and replace existing roofing with thermally reflective roofing. By doing this for an entire block at a time neighborhoods are preserved and increased in value to the residents. Finance the whole mess through "no cost increase" utility bills.

  3. Start eliminating the most wasteful vehicles and means of transportation. Put a bounty on large SUV's caught NOT working for construction, farming and engineering firms. Driving hubby's quad-cab to drop off the kids at school gets it impounded even if he's a bricklayer. Phase out fixed wing air transport and replace with Zeppelins. (yes the original Zeppelin company is STILL making them). Revamp the rail system in a godawful hurry.

  4. Phase out high-nitrate farming and mandate organic farming methods. Finance crash programs to research Terra Preta agriculture and carbon capture. Provide low-cost loans and education for unemployed persons willing to start family scale permaculture projects.

  5. Outlaw CAFO's and finance the construction and establishment of small local slaughterhouses. Relocalize meat production and put meat animals back on pasture as nature intended them.

If we did half of this on the scale required we would be shutting existing coal plants within ten years. We won't do much of it at all instead.

Now we're going to do little or none of this because centralized, corporate, energy wastefulness and pollution is what makes billionaires the rich bastards that they are. At some point even they will realize that their children would not want a trashed planet and they will join the rest of us.

Of course there's always the French solution; is anyone knitting shrouds lately?

Put the Carbon Back

Thanks

How did I miss this earlier? What I love about this piece, aside from the absolute truth of it, is the acknowledgement of grief. I think it's one reason why we're having such a hard time getting some people to move beyond what we label as apathy. We live in a culture that is totally afraid of the so-called dark emotions of despair, grief, anger. Climate change touches all of those in me, especially grief. I would expect it would in others, once they really let it in. And I think we resist allowing it. Sometimes, though, it can't be avoided. Life's like that. But to willingly let it in?

The emotional and spiritual aspects of climate change have to be acknowledged. Looking at my small grandsons this Christmas, I often caught myself wondering what their future will be like and how it will be limited or cut short or even denied because of choices we've made and continue to make. And the Earth. It's not just how humans may suffer. So many innocent creatures, so much beauty. Damn . . .

random thoughts after skimming through this

(1)

Good ammunition for the right... environmentalists wigging out because they might have reached the conclusion that there is no way to stop global climate change by replacing incandescent bulbs with CFLs, buying local organic produce, and riding bicycles. We might actually have to use technology to solve a problem created by technology.

(2)

I'm more concerned about arctic biodiversity than other organisms on the planet. Those living in cold regions appear to have no place to go. And my concern is primarily for individual animals who will actually experience the loss of food and starve to death. I wish nations could cooperate to find areas that might remain or become suitable for animals like polar bears, set them aside as nature preserves, and relocate animals as other areas are no longer suitable.

It is likely that once the ice sheets melt, the Gulf Stream shuts down, and Europe goes into a deep freeze there will be quite a bit of cold snowy habitat for arctic wildlife... all around the Baltic!

The rest of the biosphere will probably be okay... though it will change. Worrying about the end of life on Earth is pointless. There have been periods of time when the poles were quite balmy... life as a whole survived, adapted, evolved. There were actually trees growing in areas that were cold and totally dark for months. Frozen poles are not necessarily "normal". I posted  a graph elsewhere -- showing the warm and cold periods -- but no one cared to discuss it then, so I'm not going to bother tracking it down again.

(3)

Humans will adapt. No one can say they were not warned. I believe it is up to the United Nations to start finding new homes for people if necessary and investing in new infrastructure, like dikes, if practical.It is an economic opportunity -- one it would be better to not have, I must admit -- that will create a lot of jobs. I'm not worried about humans. I just hope that when the U.S. finally coughs up some foreign aide for low-lying nations, we'll hire LOCAL people to do the necessary work.

(4)

Environmentalists might have to think outside THEIR box. We all have to consider strategies that do not fit our world view. This is my opportunity to bring up GMOs again. Would you rather see geo-engineering -- dumping chemicals in the air or water to reduce sunlight or remove CO2 --- or genetic engineering -- creating plants that remove more CO2 from the atmosphere and store it in a natural form that does not rapidly degrade and plants that do not require synthetic fertilizer, the manufacture of which contributes quite a bit to global warming?

I know it is not "natural", but what feature of human civilization IS "natural"?

(5)

Finally, don't panic... yet. It is still important to do everything possible to slow down the process, even if it is inevitable. We need all the time we can find as a species to adapt to the new climate and preserve all the biodiversity we can. We are going to need every resource evolution has created on Earth. If we've really reached a tipping point, the Earth will become warmer than humans have ever experienced before, warmer than our primitive ancestors ever experienced before, perhaps warmer than primates ever experienced before. Even the deniers should be trembling in fear. It is going to be very interesting.

Stop Making Babies!

Stop making babies! I mean it. If you want a solution to the effects of global warming, then stop making so many babies. With six point however many gazzion people on Earth and a population that has already outstripped the ability to live on renewable resources minus all that ancient sunlight stored in oil/coal/blah-blah-blah, we cannot afford to continue indulging that mother/father-instinct anymore.

Half a billion people could live here (Earth, not the United States) and burn as much carbon-based fuel as they wanted to without ever contributing to climate change. If we do not voluntarily downsize the global population, it will be put upon us at the moment the last straw breaks and a de-populization cascade effect begins.

It would be much better if all the hetero/bi/closeted/lesbians-that-just-have-to-have-a-baby breaders would just stop it! And make sure you blast this message on loudspeakers in every locally used language throughout your neighborhoods, because the most prolific breaders aren't usually the most prolific readers.

This is how we queers can save the world. And if you boys get lonely, just give me a call. I promise you won't get pregnant.

IMHO

I agree with Slamrock, stop making babies.

I disagree with the author, more government will not bring about any solutions, government always has been, and always will be, a tool of the rich and powerful, giving them more government will just give them more power.

The real solution is to let civilization collapse and to go back to decentralized community living.

And make it an unforgivable taboo/sin for anyone to ever try to establish any form of government ever again.

Government is how the rich and powerful control the people and ruin the world.

POINT OF NO RETURN

To be realistic, we must consider all scientifics conclusions and if its true that point of no return will come fast and furious within 5 to 10 years if nothing is done, we may consider today we have reach it because nobody react properly including you who read this, but as usual you will say later on "if I knew"

A worldwide organisation of scientists and specialists, named PLANETFUTURE, the very first entity who described, in the eighties the actual known situation came since three years with tested feasible solutions but from there to the point leaders will be ready to operate those solutions it's an other story...

One of their leaders said two years ago, if the planet citizens knew only fifty per cent of the truth all of them will decide to spend rest of their life working on it.
He said also, union of a maximum of planet citizens will only oblige leaders to move now... so far only one Nicolas SARKOZI the france president understood what they are talking about and declares doing nothing right now about it is purely criminal.
We are not talking of some degrees more or meters of elevation of the oceans, no, we are talking about YOUR OWN SURVIVAL and the one of the world you know.

We must help us by helping planetfuture to act and oblige leaders to move immediately; join them send email to info@planetfuture.org and tell them your support and willingness for you and your childrens to live on a livable planet and not in hell.

Prof. John M. Verswyver

dsa


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