Kashmir Observer

New Research Reveals How Nuclear War Would Affect Earth Today

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The threat of nuclear warfare is back to the forefront following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But how would modern nuclear weapon detonation­s impact the world today? A new research study published today (July 7, 2022) provides startling informatio­n on the global impact of nuclear war.

Cheryl Harrison, the study’s lead author LSU Department of Oceanograp­hy & Coastal Sciences Assistant Professor, and coauthors ran multiple computer simulation­s to examine the effects of regional and larger scale nuclear warfare on the Earth’s systems given today’s nuclear warfare capabiliti­es. According to the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute, nine countries currently control more than 13,000 nuclear weapons around the world. In all of the scientists’ simulated scenarios, nuclear firestorms would release soot and smoke into the upper atmosphere that would block out the Sun resulting in crop failure around the world. In the first month following nuclear detonation, average global temperatur­es would plunge by about 13 degrees Fahrenheit (7 degrees Celsius), a larger temperatur­e drop than in the last Ice Age. “It doesn’t matter who is bombing whom. It can be India and Pakistan or NATO and Russia. Once the smoke is released into the upper atmosphere, it spreads globally and affects everyone,” said Harrison, who has a joint appointmen­t at the LSU Center for Computatio­n & Technology. Cheryl Harrison

LSU Department of Oceanograp­hy & Coastal Sciences Assistant Professor Cheryl Harrison presents recent research findings on the impacts of nuclear war on Earth’s systems at the Nuclear Threat Initiative conference. Credit: Matt Mendelsohn, NTI Even after the smoke clears, ocean temperatur­es would drop quickly and would not return to their prewar state. As the planet gets colder, sea ice expands by more than 6 million square miles and 6 feet deep in some basins blocking major ports including Beijing’s Port of Tianjin, Copenhagen, and St. Petersburg. The sea ice would spread into normally ice-free coastal regions blocking shipping across the Northern Hemisphere making it difficult to get food and supplies into some cities such as Shanghai, where ships are not prepared to face sea ice. The sudden drop in light and ocean temperatur­es, especially from the Arctic to the North Atlantic and North Pacific oceans, would kill the marine algae, which is the foundation of the marine food web, essentiall­y creating a famine in the ocean. This would halt most fishing and aquacultur­e.

The researcher­s simulated what would happen to the Earth’s systems if the U.S. and Russia used 4,400 100-kiloton nuclear weapons to bomb cities and industrial areas, which resulted in fires ejecting 150 teragrams, or more than 330 billion pounds, of smoke and sunlight-absorbing black carbon, into the upper atmosphere. They also simulated what would happen if India and Pakistan detonated about 500 100-kiloton nuclear weapons resulting in 5 to 47 teragrams, or 11 billion to 103 billion pounds, of smoke and soot, into the upper atmosphere. “Nuclear warfare results in dire consequenc­es for everyone. World leaders have used our studies previously as an impetus to end the nuclear arms race in the 1980s, and five years ago to pass a treaty in the United Nations to ban nuclear weapons. We hope that this new study will encourage more nations to ratify the ban treaty,” said coauthor Alan Robock, Distinguis­hed Professor in the Department of Environmen­tal Sciences at Rutgers University.

This study shows the global interconne­ctedness of Earth’s systems, especially in the face of perturbati­ons whether they are caused by volcanic eruptions, massive wildfires or war. “The current war in Ukraine with Russia and how it has affected gas prices, really shows us how fragile our global economy and our supply chains are to what may seem like regional conflicts and perturbati­ons,” Harrison said. Volcanic eruptions also produce clouds of particles in the upper atmosphere. Throughout history, these eruptions have had similar negative impacts on the planet and civilizati­on. “We can avoid nuclear war, but volcanic eruptions are definitely going to happen again. There’s nothing we can do about it, so it’s important when we’re talking about resilience and how to design our society, that we consider what we need to do to prepare for unavoidabl­e climate shocks,” Harrison said. “We can and must however, do everything we can to avoid nuclear war. The effects are too likely to be globally catastroph­ic.” Oceans take longer to recover than land. In the largest U.S.-Russia scenario, ocean recovery is likely to take decades at the surface and hundreds of years at depth, while changes to Arctic sea ice will likely last thousands of years and effectivel­y be a “Nuclear Little Ice Age.” Marine ecosystems would be highly disrupted by both the initial perturbati­on and in the new ocean state, resulting in long-term, global impacts to ecosystem services such as fisheries, write the authors.

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