Global warming is real
S P SETH
The recent report by the UN
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has predicted a virtual Armageddon of
global warming in the years to come, by the end of the century at the latest, if
humanity fails to put their collective heads together to avert this disaster.
The report was in the making for six years involving more than 800 scientists
around the world. And their main finding is that it is “extremely likely” that
humans are the dominant cause of global warming, with carbon dioxide emissions
the main factor. The report, being the fifth major assessment of the UN Panel on
climate change, expands on the last one issued in 2007 with new evidence that
things are only getting worse.
Amplifying on this, Qin Dahe, co-chairman
of the IPCC working group that compiled the report, said, “The atmosphere and
ocean have warmed, the amount of snow and ice have diminished, the global mean
sea level has risen and the concentrations of green house gases have
increased.” And unless the rise in global temperatures is kept down to 2
degrees by the end of this century, which seems a herculean task as the rise
might reach 4.8 degrees, the world might be crossing the threshold of managing
the impending disaster. As it is, according to the report, each of the past
three decades has been warmer than any preceding decade since 1850, and the
past thirty years have been warmest since AD 600.
The annual report of the World
Meteorological Organization has also warned against global warming. As reported
in Britain’s Financial Times, it said “The first 10 years of this century were
the hottest in 160 years and filled with more broken temperature records than
any other decade as global warming continued to accelerate.” Which is reflected
in rising sea levels, melting of Arctic ice, and the world’s glaciers, thawing
of permafrost releasing methane which is even more toxic for the atmosphere
than CO2, acidification of oceans damaging coral reefs and sea life and so on. All
these changes, as we are already seeing, will increase the frequency of
disastrous occurrences like tropical cyclones, bush fires, floods and the
likes.
The obvious question is: what is causing
global warming? As mentioned earlier, it is largely caused by increased carbon
emissions into the atmosphere by reckless use of fossil fuels to fuel the
ever-expanding global economies. The CO2 thus emitted is trapped into the
atmosphere, increasing global temperatures. As sea levels rise further, some of
the low level countries will be at high risk of becoming uninhabitable or
sinking altogether. Which could lead to massive internal and external
migrations. And such mass migrations, particularly to other countries, might
lead to a highly dangerous global situation with some countries raising
barriers to keep out the environmental refugees. Besides, increasing frequency
of droughts might lead to nasty conflicts around water shortages and shrinking
arable land. Therefore, global warming is not only going to upset the ecosystem,
but it is likely to create military conflicts between neighbors and in the
world at large.
Another factor causing global warming is
the shrinking of the world’s forests due to land clearing for agriculture,
urban development, timber exports and so on. The forests are the world’s
natural carbon sinks as this is, in a way, their oxygen. With the forest cover
shrinking all over the world, the carbon emissions have nowhere to go but into
the atmosphere. To these two will be added the thawing of permafrost releasing
methane gas that will make things even worse.
What can be done to mitigate the situation,
if not actually reverse it? So far, despite all the international conferences
on the subject, there is no real progress. There is some wrangling over
specific targets to reduce carbon emissions, with developed countries urging
developing economies to commit to them. Which would amount, more or less, to them
accepting a permanently lower level of development for their people who are
already among the most deprived in the world. The developing countries have, by
and large, no viable options for economic development without using fossil fuels.
Their argument is that the world is in such a mess environmentally because the
United States and the developed countries of the west recklessly exploited
global resources, including fossil fuels, over the last two centuries or more. And
they still are not slowing down. Looking at the new sources of oil and gas
being extracted, like from tar sands in Canada and shale rocks in the US and
elsewhere, the discourse on climate change seems strong on rhetoric than
action.
The only effective way to deal with global
warming, and keep temperatures from rising over 2 degrees, is to reorient
economies from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources, such as solar, wind etc.
It seems so simple, yet there are many problems. The most important is the
vested interests of the global oil industry with its enormous resources to
impede, delay or sabotage any real movement away from fossil fuels. Second, for
renewable energy sources to become competitive, there is need for greater
investment in new technology, both by the industry and the governments. And this
is not forthcoming, even in the midst of all the scientific evidence of the
impending disaster.
Indeed, the skeptics and climate change
deniers are not even convinced by the science of climate change. They deny that
humans have anything to do with climate change, if it is happening at all. For
them it is nature taking its own course, as it has done all through the ages.
Some even suggest that it is a political conspiracy by the Green and Left
forces to bring down the capitalist system. However, over many years now, most
scientists have arrived at the conclusion, as reflected in the recent UN report
of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, that global warming is real and
the humans, by and large, are responsible for it.
While the world needs to address this
impending disaster urgently with all the measures at its disposal, there is
need to recognize that as long as the governing model of limitless economic
growth remains the norm, with greed and conspicuous consumption its guiding
principle, we seem to be headed towards inevitable disaster. It is simply not
sustainable, because planet doesn’t have limitless resources to support
bottomless human greed. Therefore, even with all the mitigating measures, we
might still end up exhausting the nature’s bounty. There is a need, therefore,
to work in harmony with nature than to confront and seek to overpower it,
wherein lies the path to destruction.
We need to downsize our plunder and
vandalism of the planet to conserve its resources and partake of them with a
sense of humility, equity and shared enterprise. And that will require a new
international economic order to avert the impending Armageddon from global
warming. We don’t have much time and hence the need for urgent collective
action.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
Contact: sushilpseth@yahoo.com.au
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