Planetary Suicide
By Joel S. Hirschhorn
February 15, 2015 "ICH"
- Every so often a nonfiction book comes
along that, because of its objective,
comprehensive coverage of a hot topic,
should be carefully read with a highlighter
in hand by everyone. That new book is
Unprecedented by David Ray
Griffin. Be warned, this book will probably
bum you out. It presents the most readable
treatment of the global warming and climate
change issue that anyone could wish for. It
is not an emotional rant, but rather a
carefully organized and detailed
discussion. Most significantly, with
carefully documented sources, it allows a
reader to fully appreciate the compelling
and overwhelming scientific evidence
supporting a negative view of our planet’s
and civilization’s future.
Sadly, I suspect that the
many climate deniers who most need to read
such a book and learn all the facts will
probably not do so. However, for the
greater number of sensible people who do
believe that the planet is, or is likely to
be, on a path to unspeakable disaster, this
book is a most useful resource to better
understand, debate and actively support
faster and more effective political action
by the US and other nations.
I was more motivated than
most others to read this book because I
recently completed a trip into the
Antarctic. With my own eyes I saw evidence
of what Griffin discusses, including
sea-level rise resulting from melting ice
and higher ocean temperatures. I find this
particular problem perhaps the most
compelling of a number of global
environmental changes that threatens
humanity. Why? Because sea-level rise has
been going on for a long time, eating up
coastal lands all over the world. But now
sea-level rise is accelerating and at such a
rapid rate that virtually all major coastal
cities are extremely threatened.
Emissions already in the
atmosphere spell tragedy for 316 US cities
where 3.6 million people live, according to
a
paper in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences. And without forceful
action, things will only get worse.
People may not care much
about a few islands disappearing. But
untold millions of people will face the need
to escape cities worldwide that will not be
able to cope with and survive many feet of
higher oceans flooding their infrastructure,
streets and housing. Where will those
millions of people go? How will such deep
economic disaster be managed by governments?
What I saw in Antarctica
was the melting away of glaciers on
mountains. Even more startling was seeing
unbelievably large tabular, rectangular
icebergs in the ocean near Antarctica, often
with dimensions of a mile or more. These
are pieces of ice sheets that are
increasingly breaking off because of warmer
air and water. Third, is the shrinkage of
some penguin home sites because of higher
temperatures.
Will technology come to
the rescue? I am old enough to remember the
1960s when there was a passionate argument
that rising population and consequent food
shortages spelled global doom. It did not
happen. Why? Because various technologies
came to the rescue and greatly expanded food
production. This and other disaster
scenarios that never come to pass foster an
attitude of technological optimism. This
blocks both political action and public
demands for emergency solutions to
ecological catastrophe tied to climate
change and global warming. So, will there
be a technological solution enacted fast
enough to prevent this new nightmare
scenario? It is a lot to hope for. It is
being called geoengineering. It includes
methods to remove carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere and to reflect sunlight. Griffin
pays just a little attention to
geoengineering and not in the final section
of the book where it belongs.
A major problem with all
those trying to get the public, the media
and the political world to focus on fast
actions to sharply cut carbon dioxide
emissions now is that they fear attention to
geoengineering will make it harder to take
rapid actions to replace dirty technologies
with green ones. Two new
related reports on climate intervention
by the US National Academy of Sciences
support more geoengineering research.. But
the head of the research project noted “we
need to do more now to reduce emissions,
which is the most effective, least risky way
to combat climate change.”
The best strategy is to
pursue both approaches, emissions reduction
and geoengineering, with vigor, but this is
not emphasized by Griffin or many others
sounding alarms about climate change. With
so much at stake, to depend on either
approach by itself is foolish. To wait
until emissions reduction does not greatly
cut global disaster threats to develop a
geoengineering solution is crazy.
Another cautionary note to
the many trying to broaden public passion
and government action is to stop saying
things like what Griffin says at the end of
his book: “Given our refusal to cut
emissions over the past 30 years, it is
already too late to save the kind of world
that has been hospitable to human being
since the rise of civilization.” Okay,
maybe that pessimistic view has some
credence. But it also can feed broad public
disinterest because it is too late and makes
it difficult to take gutsy political action
and spend big money on remedies.
As Griffin noted, a 2013
Pew poll found that only 28 percent of
Americans believe climate change should be a
top priority of federal politicians. What
an utterly dismal situation. A more recent
2015
poll found that the segment of the US
population having the strongest views for
addressing climate change are Hispanics and,
conversely, Republicans have the least
concern about it. Unless a large majority
of people take responsibility for
contributing to planetary suicide the worst
scenarios are likely to come true.
I urge everyone who reads
this book to get at least three other people
to also read it. If pessimism, selfishness
and narcissism prevail, concern about future
generations will be largely disregarded.
Can most people give high priority to the
strong possibility that the human race as we
know it today does not survive? The
subtitle of Griffin’s book is “Can
civilization survive the CO2
crisis?” Read the book and you are likely
to say No! Then the question is: Are you
now motivated to speak up and work to avoid
perilous decay and doomsday?
Contact Joel S.
Hirschhorn through
http://articlev.wix.com/statusquobuster