Extinct—Extincter—Extinctest
By Dmitry Orlov
February 17, 2015 "ICH"
- "Club
Orlov" -
This blog is
dedicated to the idea of presenting the big
picture—the biggest possible—of what is
going on in the world. The abiding areas of
interest that make up the big picture have
included the following:
1. The terminal decay and eventual collapse
of industrial civilization as the fossil
fuels that power it become more and more
expensive to produce in the needed
quantities, of lower and lower resource
quality and net energy and, eventually, in
ever-shorter supply.
The first guess by Hubbert that the all-time
peak of oil production in the US would be
back in the 1970s was accurate, but later
prediction of a global peak, followed by a
swift collapse, around the year 2000 was
rather off, because here we are 15 years
later and global oil production has never
been higher. Oil prices, which were high for
a time, have temporarily moderated. However,
zooming in on the oil picture just a little
bit, we see that conventional oil production
peaked in 2005—just 5 years late—and has
been declining ever since, and the shortfall
has been made up by oil that is difficult
and expensive to get at (deep offshore,
fracking) and by things that aren't exactly
oil (tar sands).
The current low prices are not high enough
to sustain this new, expensive production
for much longer, and the current glut is
starting to look like a feast to be followed
by famine. The direct cause of this famine
will not be energy but debt, but it can
still be traced back to energy: a
successful, growing industrial economy
requires cheap energy; expensive
energy causes it to stop growing and to
become mired in debt that can never be
repaid. Once the debt bubble pops, there
isn't enough capital to invest in another
round of expensive energy production, and
terminal decay sets in.
2. The very interesting process of the USA
becoming its own nemesis: the USSR 2.0, or,
as some are calling, the USSA.
The USA is best characterized as a
decomposing corpse of a nation lorded over
by a tiny clique of oligarchs who control
the herd by wielding Orwellian methods of
mind control. So far gone is the populace
that most of them think that things are just
peachy—there is an economic recovery, don't
you know—but a few of them do realize that
they all have lots of personal issues with
things like violence, drug and alcohol
abuse, and gluttony. But don't call them a
nation of violent, drug-abusing gluttons,
because that would be insulting. In any
case, you can't call them anything, because
they aren't listening, for they are too busy
fiddling with their electronic life support
units to which they have become addicted.
Thanks to Facebook and the like they are now
so far inside Plato's cave that even the
shadows they see aren't real: they are
computer simulations of shadows of other
computer simulations.
The signs of this advanced state of
decomposition are now unmistakable
everywhere you look, be it education,
medicine, culture or the general state of
American society, where now fully half the
working-age men is impaired in their ability
to earn a decent living. But it is now
particularly obvious in the endless
compounding of errors that is the essence of
American foreign policy. Some have started
calling it “the empire of chaos,” neglecting
to mention the fact that an empire of chaos
is by definition ungovernable.
A particularly compelling example o failure
is the Islamic Caliphate, which now rules
large parts of Syria and Iraq. It was
initially organized with American help
topple the Syrian government, but which now
threatens the stability of Saudi Arabia
instead. This problem was made much worse by
alienating Russia, which, with its long
Central Asian border, is the one major
nation that is interested in fighting
Islamic extremism. The best the Americans
have been able to do against the Caliphate
is an expensive and ineffectual bombing
campaign. Previous ineffectual and expensive
bombing campaigns, such as the one in
Cambodia, have produced unintended
consequences such as the genocidal regime of
Pol Pot, but why bother learning from
mistakes when you can endlessly compound
them?
Another example is the militarized mayhem
and full-blown economic collapse that has
engulfed the Ukraine in the wake of
American-organized violent overthrow of its
last-ever constitutional government a year
ago. The destruction of the Ukraine was
motivated by Zbigniew Brzezinski's
simplistic calculus that turning the Ukraine
into an anti-Russian NATO-occupied zone
would effectively thwart Russian imperial
ambitions. A major problem with this
calculus is that Russia has no imperial
ambitions: Russia has all the territory it
could ever want, but to develop it it needs
peace and free trade. Another slight problem
with Zbiggy's “chessboard” is that Russia
does have an overriding concern with
protecting the interests of Russians
wherever they may live and, for internal
political reasons, will always act to
protect them, even if such actions are
illegal and carry the risk of a larger
military conflict. Thus, the American
destabilization of the Ukraine has
accomplished nothing positive, but did
increase the odds of nuclear
self-annihilation. But if the USA manages to
disappear from the world's political map
without triggering a nuclear holocaust, we
will still have a problem, which is that...
3. The climate of Earth, our home planet,
is, to put it as politely as possible,
completely fucked. Now, there are quite a
few people who think that radically altering
the planet's atmospheric and ocean chemistry
and physics by burning just over half the
fossilized hydrocarbons that could possibly
be dug up using industrial means nothing,
and that what we are observing is just
natural climate variability. These people
are morons. I will delete every single one
of the comments they submit in response to
this post, but in spite of my promise to do
so, I assure you that they will still submit
them... because they are morons.
What we are looking at is a human-triggered
extinction episode that will certainly be
beyond anything in human experience, and
which may rival the great Permian-Triassic
extinction event of 252 million years ago.
There is even the possibility of Earth
becoming completely sterilized, with an
atmosphere as overheated and toxic as that
of Venus. That these changes are happening
does not require prediction, just
observation. The only parameters that remain
to be determined are these:
1. How far will this process run? Will there
still be a habitat where humans can survive?
Humans cannot survive without plenty of
fresh water and sources of carbohydrates,
proteins and fats, all of which require
functioning ecosystems. Humans can survive
on almost any kind of diet—even tree bark
and insects—but if all vegetation is dead,
then so are we. Also, we cannot survive in
an environment where the wet bulb
temperature (which takes into account our
ability to cool ourselves by sweating)
exceeds our body temperature: whenever that
happens, we die of heat stroke. Lastly, we
need air that we can actually breathe: if
the atmosphere becomes too low in oxygen
(because the vegetation has died out) and
too high in carbon dioxide and methane
(because the dead vegetation has burned off,
the permafrost has melted, and the methane
currently trapped in oceanic clathrates has
been released) then we all die.
We already know that the increase in average
global temperature has exceeded 1C since
pre-industrial times, and, based on the
altered atmospheric chemistry, is predicted
to eventually exceed 2C. We also know that
industrial activity, thanks to the aerosols
it puts into the atmosphere, produces an
effect known as global dimming. Once
it's gone, the average temperature will jump
by at least another 1.1C. This would put us
within striking range of 3.5C, and no humans
have ever been alive with Earth more than
3.5C above baseline. But, you know, there is
a first time for everything. Maybe we can
invent some gizmo... Maybe if we all put on
air-conditioned sombreros or something...
(Design contest, anyone?)
2. How fast will this process happen?
The thermal mass of the planet is such that
there is a 40-year lag between when
atmospheric chemistry is changed and its
effects on average temperature are felt. So
far we have been shielded from some of the
effects by two things: the melting of Arctic
and Antarctic ice and permafrost, and the
ocean's ability to absorb heat. Your iced
drink remains pleasant until the last ice
cube is gone, but then it becomes tepid and
distasteful rather quickly. Some scientists
say that, on the outside, it will take 5000
years for us to run out of ice cubes,
causing the party to end, but then the
dynamics of the huge glaciers that supply
the ice cubes are not understood all that
well, and there have been constant surprises
in terms of how quickly they can slough off
icebergs, which then drift into warmer
waters and melt quickly.
But the biggest surprise of the last few
years has been the rate of arctic methane
release. Perhaps you haven't, but I've found
it impossible to ignore all the scientists
who have been ringing alarm bells on Arctic
methane release. What they are calling the
clathrate gun—which can release some
50 gigatons of methane in as little as a
couple of decades—appears to have been fired
in 2007 and now, just a few years later, the
trend line in Arctic methane concentrations
has become alarming. But we will need to
wait for at least another two years to get
an authoritative answer. Overall, the
methane held in the clathrates is enough to
exceed the global warming potential of all
fossil fuels burned to date by a factor of
between 4 and 40. The upper end of that
range does seem to put us quite far towards
a Venus-type atmosphere, and the surviving
species may be limited to exotic
thermophilic bacteria, if that, and
certainly will not include any of the
species we like to eat, nor any of us.
Looking at such numbers has caused quite a
few researchers to propose the possibility
of near-term human extinction. Estimates
vary, but, in general, if the clathrate gun
has indeed gone off, then most of us
shouldn't be planning to be around beyond
mid-century. But the funny thing is (humor
is never in poor taste, no matter how dire
the situation) that most of us shouldn't be
planning on sticking around beyond
mid-century in any case. The current
oversized human population is a product of
fossil fuel-burning, and once that's over,
human population will crash. This is called
a die-off, and it's something that happens
all the time: a population (say, of yeast in
a vat of sugary liquid) consumes its food,
and then dies off. A few hardy individuals
linger on, and if you throw in a lump of
sugar, they spring to life, start
reproducing and the process takes off again.
Another funny aspect of near-term human
extinction is that it can never be
observable, because no scientist will ever
be around to observe it, and therefore it is
a non-scientific concept. Since it cannot be
used to do science, the scientists who throw
it around must be aiming for an emotional
effect. This is quite uncharacteristic of
scientists, who generally pride themselves
on being cool-headed and prefer to deal in
the observable and the measurable. So, why
would scientists go for emotional effect?
Clearly, it is because they feel that
something must be done. And to feel that
something must be done, they must also feel
that something can be done. But, if
so, what is it?
Always first on the list is the effort to
lobby governments to limit carbon emissions.
This has not been a success; as to one of
the many reasons why, consider point 2
above: the USA is one of the biggest
offenders when it comes to carbon emissions,
but the rotting corpse of America's
political system is incapable of any
constructive action. It is too busy
destroying countries: Iraq, Libya, Syria,
Ukraine...
Second on the list is something called
geoengineering. If you don't know what
it is, don't worry; it's largely a synonym
for mental masturbation. The idea is that
you fix things you don't understand by using
technologies that don't exist. But given
many humans' irrational belief that every
problem must have a technological solution,
there is always some fool willing to throw
money at it. Previous efforts along these
lines involved the idea of seeding the
oceans with iron to promote plankton growth,
or putting bits of tin foil in orbit to
reflect some of the sunlight, or painting
the Sahara white. These are all fun projects
to think about. How about using nuclear
weapons to put dust into the atmosphere, to
block out some of the sunlight? Or how about
nuking a few big volcanos, for the same
effect? If that's politically difficult, how
about something politically easy: a limited
nuclear exchange? That will darken the
skies, bringing on a mini nuclar winter, and
also reduce the population, which will cut
down on industrial activity. There are
enough nuclear weapons to keep the planet
cool for as long as it takes us all to die
of radiation poisoning. This geoengineering
solution, along with all the others, is in
line with the popular dictum “If you can't
solve a problem, enlarge it.”
And so it seems to me that all the talk
about near-term human extinction is just so
much emotional hand-flapping designed to
motivate people to try things that won't
work. Still, I believe the topic is worth
pondering, for a simple reason: what if you
don't want to go extinct? We've already
established that human extinction (whenever
it might be said to occur) will never be
observable, because no human will be around
to observe it. We also know that population
die-offs happen all the time, but they don't
always result in extinction. So, who will be
most likely to die, and who might actually
make it?
First on the list are the invisible victims
of war. By now lots of people have seen
photographs of piles of dead Ukrainian
soldiers left to rot after another failed
attack, or videos of residents of Donetsk
expiring on the sidewalk after being hit by
a government artillery shell or mortar. But
we don't know how many children and women
are dying in childbirth because the
government has bombed maternity clinics and
hospitals: such casualties of war are
invisible. Nor will we be shown footage of
all of the Ukrainian retirees expiring
prematurely because they can no longer
afford food, medicine or heat, but we can be
sure that many of them won't be around a
year hence. When it comes to war, there are
just two viable survival strategies: refuse
to take part; and flee. Indeed, the million
or so Ukrainians that are now in Russia, or
the million or so Syrians who are no longer
in Syria, are the smart ones. The Ukrainians
who are volunteering to fight are the
idiots; the ones who are fleeing to Russia
to sit out the war are the smart ones.
(However, the Russians, who are volunteering
to protect their land and their families
from what amounts to an American invasion,
are clearly not idiots. They are also
winning.) In this sense, war is a Darwinian
process, delivering extinction to the
foolish.
Next on the list of extinction episodes to
avoid happens in major cities during a heat
wave. It's happened across Europe in 2003,
and resulted in 70,000 casualties. In 2010,
a heat wave in the Moscow region (which is
quite far north) resulted in over 14,000
deaths in Moscow alone. The urban heat
effect, which is caused by heat soaked
up by pavement and buildings, produces much
higher local temperatures, driving them over
the threshold for heat stroke. While the
fossil fuel economy continues to operate,
cities remain survivable because of the
availability of air conditioning; once it
shuts down, urban heat wave extinction
episodes will become widespread. Since 50%
of the population lives in cities, half of
the human population is at risk of
extinction from heat stroke. Therefore, if
you don't want to go extinct, don't spend
your summers in a city.
The list of places you don't want to be if
you wish to avoid extinction gets rather
long. You wouldn't want to live in
California, for example, or in the arid
southwestern states, because there won't be
any water there. You wouldn't want to live
along the coasts, because they are likely to
be flooded by the rising oceans (they will
eventually rise over 100 meters, putting all
coastal cities underwater). You wouldn't
want to live in the eastern half of North
America, because, paradoxically, a
dramatically warmer Arctic region causes the
jet stream to meander, producing
increasingly fierce winters, which, minus
fossil fuels, will cause widespread deaths
from exposure. Even now, a bit of extra
snow, which is likely to become the new
normal, has caused the entire transportation
infrastructure of New England (where,
luckily, I am not) to roll over and play
dead. Nor would you want to live in any of
the places where the water source comes from
glacial melt, because the glaciers will soon
be gone. This includes much of Pakistan,
large parts of India, Bangladesh, Thailand,
Vietnam and so on. The list of places where
you wouldn't want to be if you don't want to
go extinct for this or that reason gets to
be rather long.
But the entire northern half of Eurasia
looks quite nice for the foreseeable future,
so if you don't want to go extinct, you
better start teaching your kids Russian.
Dmitry Orlov is a Russian-American engineer
and a writer on subjects related to
"potential economic, ecological and
political decline and collapse in the United
States," something he has called “permanent
crisis”.
http://cluborlov.blogspot.com
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