Welcome to a New Planet
Climate Change “Tipping Points” and the Fate of the Earth
By Michael T. KlareOctober 08, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "TomDispatch"
- Not so long ago, it was science fiction. Now, it’s hard science --
and that should frighten us all. The latest reports from the
prestigious and sober Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
make increasingly hair-raising reading, suggesting that the planet
is approaching possible moments of irreversible damage in a fashion
and at a speed that had not been anticipated.
Scientists have long worried that climate change
will not continue to advance in a “linear” fashion, with the planet
getting a little bit hotter most years. Instead, they fear,
humanity could someday experience “non-linear” climate shifts (also
known as “singularities” or “tipping points”) after which there
would be sudden and irreversible change of a catastrophic nature.
This was the premise of the 2004 climate-disaster film
The Day After Tomorrow. In that movie -- most notable
for its vivid scenes of a frozen-over New York City -- melting polar
ice causes a disruption in the
North Atlantic Current, which in turn triggers a series of
catastrophic storms and disasters. At the time of its release, many
knowledgeable scientists
derided the film’s premise, insisting that the confluence of
events it portrayed was unlikely or simply impossible.
Fast forward 11 years and the prospect of such
calamitous tipping points in the North Atlantic or elsewhere no
longer looks improbable. In fact, climate scientists have begun to
note
early indicators of possible catastrophes.
Take the disruption of the North Atlantic Current,
the pivotal event in The Day After Tomorrow. Essentially
an extension of the Gulf Stream, that deep-sea current
carries relatively warm salty water from the South Atlantic and
the Caribbean to the northern reaches of the Atlantic. In the
process, it helps keep Europe warmer than it would otherwise be.
Once its salty water flows into sub-Arctic areas carried by this
prolific stream, it gets colder and heavier, sinks to lower depths,
and starts a return trip to warmer climes in the south where the
whole process begins again.
So long as this “global
conveyor belt” -- known to scientists as the Atlantic Meridional
Overturning Circulation, or
AMOC -- keeps functioning, the Gulf Stream will also continue to
bring warmer waters to the eastern United States and Europe. Should
it be disrupted, however, the whole system might break down, in
which case the Euro-Atlantic climate could turn colder and more
storm-prone. Such a disruption might occur if the vast Greenland
ice sheet melts in a significant way, as indeed is already
beginning to happen today, pouring large quantities of salt-free
fresh water into the Atlantic Ocean. Because of its lighter weight,
this newly introduced water will remain close to the surface,
preventing the submergence of salty water from the south and so
effectively shutting down the conveyor belt. Indeed, exactly this
process now seems to be
underway.
By all accounts, 2015 is likely to wind up as the
hottest year on record, with large parts of the world suffering from
severe
heat waves and
wildfires. Despite all this, however, a
stretch of the North Atlantic below Iceland and Greenland is
experiencing
all-time cold temperatures, according to the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration. What explains this anomaly?
According to scientists from the Potsdam Institute for Climate
Impact Research and Pennsylvania State University, among other
institutions, the most likely
explanation is the arrival in the area of cold water from the
Greenland ice sheet that is
melting ever more rapidly thanks to climate change. Because
this meltwater starts out salt-free, it has remained near the
surface and so, as predicted, is slowing the northern advance of
warmer water from the North Atlantic Current.
So far, the AMOC has not suffered a dramatic
shutdown, but it is slowing, and scientists
worry that a rapid increase in Greenland ice melt as the Arctic
continues to warm will pour ever more meltwater into the North
Atlantic, severely disrupting the conveyor system. That would,
indeed, constitute a major
tipping point, with severe consequences for Europe and eastern
North America. Not only would Europe experience colder temperatures
on an otherwise warmer planet, but coastal North America could
witness higher sea levels than those predicted from climate change
alone because the Gulf Stream
tends to pull sea water away from the eastern U.S. and push it
toward Europe. If it were to fail,
rising sea levels could endanger cities like New York and
Boston. Indeed, scientists discovered that just such a slowing of
the AMOC helped produce a sea-level rise of
four inches from New York to Newfoundland in 2009 and 2010.
In its 2014 report on the status of global
warming, the IPCC indicated that the likelihood of the AMOC
collapsing before the end of this century remains relatively low.
But some studies
suggest that the conveyor system is already 15%-20% below normal
with Greenland’s melting still in an early stage. Once that process
switches into high gear, the potential for the sort of breakdown
that was once science fiction
starts to look all too real.
Tipping Points on the Horizon
In a 2014
report, “Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability,” Working Group
II of the IPCC identified three other natural systems already
showing early-warning signs of catastrophic tipping points: the
Arctic, coral reefs, and the Amazonian forest. All three, the
report suggested, could experience massive and irreversible changes
with profound implications for human societies.
The Arctic comes in for particular scrutiny
because it has experienced more warming than any other region on the
planet and because the impact of climate change there is already
so obvious. As the report put it, “For the Arctic region, new
evidence indicates a biophysical regime shift is taking place, with
cascading impacts on physical systems, ecosystems, and human
livelihoods.”
This has begun with a massive melt of sea ice in
the region and a resulting threat to native marine species. “For
Arctic marine biota,” the report notes, “the rapid reduction of
summer ice covers causes a tipping element that is now severely
affecting pelagic [sub-surface] ecosystems as well as ice-dependent
mammals such as seals and polar bears.” Other flora and fauna of
the Arctic biome are also demonstrating stress related to climate
change. For example, vast areas of tundra are being invaded by
shrubs and small trees, decimating the habitats of some animal
species and increasing the risk of fires.
This Arctic “regime shift” affects many other
aspects of the ecosystem as well. Higher temperatures, for
instance, have meant widespread thawing and melting of
permafrost, the frozen soil and water that undergirds much of
the Arctic landmass. In this lies another possible tipping-point
danger, since frozen soils contain more than twice the carbon now
present in the atmosphere. As the permafrost melts, some of this
carbon is released in the form of
methane, a potent greenhouse gas with many times the warming
potential of carbon dioxide and other such gases. In other words,
as the IPCC noted, any significant melting of Arctic permafrost will
“create a potentially strong positive feedback to accelerate Arctic
(and global) warming.” This, in fact, could prove to be more than a
tipping point. It could be a planetary catastrophe.
Along with these biophysical effects, the warming
of the Arctic is threatening the livelihoods and lifestyles of the
indigenous peoples of the region. The loss of summer sea ice, for
example, has endangered the marine species on which many such
communities depend for food and the preservation of their cultural
traditions. Meanwhile, melting permafrost and coastal erosion due
to sea-level rise have
threatened the very existence of their coastal villages. In
September, President Obama
visited Kotzebue, a village in Alaska some 30 miles above the
Arctic Circle that could disappear as a result of melting
permafrost, rising sea levels, and ever bigger storm surges.
Coral Reefs at Risk
Another crucial ecosystem that's showing signs of
heading toward an irreversible tipping point is the world's
constellation of coral reefs. Remarkably enough, although such
reefs make up less than 1% of the Earth’s surface area, they
house up to 25% of all marine life. They are, that is,
essential for both the health of the oceans and of fishing
communities, as well as of those who depend on fish for a
significant part of their diet. According to one estimate, some
850 million people rely on coral reefs for their food security.
Corals, which are colonies of tiny animals related
to sea anemones, have proven highly sensitive to changes in the
acidity and temperature of their surrounding waters, both of which
are rising due to the absorption of excess carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere. As a result, in a visually dramatic process called
“bleaching,” coral populations have been dying out globally.
According to a recent study by the Worldwide Fund for Nature, coral
reef extent has
declined by 50% in the last 30 years and all reefs could
disappear as early as 2050 if current rates of ocean warming and
acidification continue.
“This irreversible loss of biodiversity,” reports
the IPCC, will have “significant consequences for regional marine
ecosystems as well as the human livelihoods that depend on them.”
Indeed, the growing evidence of such losses “strengthens the
conclusion that increased mass bleaching of corals constitutes a
strong warning signal for the singular event that would constitute
the irreversible loss of an entire biome.”
Amazonian Dry-Out
The Amazon has long been viewed as the epitome of
a tropical rainforest, with extraordinary plant and animal
diversity. The Amazonian tree cover also plays a vital role in
reducing the pace of global warming by absorbing vast amounts of
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere during the process of
photosynthesis. For years, however, the Amazon has been
increasingly devastated by a process of
deforestation, as settlers from Brazil’s coastal regions clear
land for farming and ranching, and loggers (many operating
illegally) harvest timber for wood products. Now, as if to add
insult to injury, the region faces a new threat from climate change:
tree mortality due to a rise in
severe drought and the increased forest fire risk that
accompanies it.
Although it can rain year-round in the
Amazon region, there is a distinct wet season with heavy
rainfall and a dry season with much less of it. An extended dry
season with little rain can endanger the survival of many trees and
increase the risk of wildfires. Research conducted by scientists at
the University of Texas has found that the dry season in the
southern Amazonian region has grown by a week every decade since
1980 while the annual fire season has lengthened. “The dry season
over the southern Amazon is already marginal for maintaining
rainforest,”
says Rong Fu, the leader of the research team. “At some point,
if it becomes too long, the rainforest will reach a tipping point”
and disappear.
Because the Amazon harbors perhaps the
largest array of distinctive flora and fauna on the planet, its
loss would represent an irreversible blow to global biodiversity.
In addition, the region hosts some of the
largest assemblages of indigenous peoples still practicing their
traditional ways of life. Even if their lives were saved (through
relocation to urban slums or government encampments), the loss of
their cultures, representing thousands of years of adaptation to a
demanding environment, would be a blow for all humankind.
As in the case of the Arctic and coral reefs, the
collapse of the Amazon will have what the IPCC terms “cascading
impacts,” devastating ecosystems, diminishing biodiversity, and
destroying the ways of life of indigenous peoples. Worse yet, as
with the melting of the Arctic, so the drying-out of Amazonia is
likely to feed into climate change, heightening its intensity and so
sparking yet more tipping points on a planet increasingly close to
the brink.
In its report, the IPCC, whose analysis tends, if
anything, to be on the conservative side of climate science,
indicated that the Amazon faced a relatively low risk of dying out
by 2100. However, a 2009 study conducted by Britain’s famed
Meteorological (Met) Office suggests that the risk is far greater
than previously assumed. Even if global temperatures were to be
held to an increase of 2 degrees Celsius, the study notes, as much
as 40% of the Amazon would perish within a century; with 3 degrees
of warming, up to 75% would vanish; and with 4 degrees, 85% would
die. “The forest as we know it would effectively be gone,”
said Met researcher Vicky Pope.
Of Tipping Points and Singularities
These four natural systems are by no means the
only ones that could face devastating tipping points in the years to
come. The IPCC report and other scientific studies hint at further
biomes that show early signs of potential catastrophe. But these
four are sufficiently advanced to tell us that we need to look at
climate change in a new way: not as a slow, linear process to which
we can adapt over time, but as a non-linear set of events involving
dramatic and irreversible changes to the global ecosphere.
The difference is critical: linear change gives us
the luxury of time to devise and implement curbs on greenhouse gas
emissions, and to construct protective measures such as sea walls.
Non-linear change puts a crimp on time and confronts us with the
possibility of relatively sudden, devastating climate shifts against
which no defensive measures can protect us.
Were the Atlantic Meridional Overturning
Circulation to fail, for example, there would be nothing we could do
to turn it back on, nor would we be able to recreate coral reefs or
resurrect the Amazon. Add in one other factor: when natural systems
of this magnitude fail, should we not expect human systems to fail
as well? No one can answer this question with certainty, but we do
know that earlier human societies
collapsed when faced with other kinds of profound changes in
climate.
All of this should be on the minds of delegates to
the upcoming
climate summit in Paris, a meeting focused on adopting an
international set of restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions. Each
participating nation is obliged to submit a set of measures it is
ready to take,
known as “intended nationally determined contributions,” or
INDCs, aimed at achieving the overall goal of preventing planetary
warming from exceeding 2 degrees Celsius. However, the INDCs
submitted to date, including those from the United States and China,
suggest a distinctly
incremental approach to the problem. Unfortunately, if
planetary tipping points are in our future, this mindset will not
measure up. It’s time to start thinking instead in terms of
civilizational survival.
Michael T. Klare, a
TomDispatch regular, is a professor of peace and
world security studies at Hampshire College and the author, most
recently, of
The Race for What’s Left. A documentary movie version of his
book Blood and Oil is available from the Media Education
Foundation. Follow him on Twitter at
@mklare1.
Follow TomDispatch on
Twitter
and join us on
Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Nick Turse’s Tomorrow’s
Battlefield: U.S. Proxy Wars and Secret Ops in Africa, and
Tom Engelhardt's latest book,
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security
State in a Single-Superpower World.
Copyright 2015 Michael T. Klare.