Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stones for our kids

Act to avoid grim climate future

- MALCOLM K. CLEAVELAND Malcolm K. Cleaveland, Ph.D., is professor emeritus of geoscience­s at the University of Arkansas at Fayettevil­le. His areas of expertise include paleoclima­tology and climatolog­y.

“Which of you, if your son asks for bread, will give him a stone?” (Matthew 7:9)

The answer Jesus expected was, of course, “No one!” If we reflect on our current situation, however, we cannot say that with any assurance. We are changing our climate, the relatively temperate climate of the last 10,000 years, and in a direction that promises tribulatio­n and conflict for our descendant­s.

A statement like the above requires evidence and it is both plentiful and irrefutabl­e. The basic physics has been known since the 19th century, and Svante Arrhenius described the greenhouse effect in 1896, predicting that carbon dioxide accumulati­ng in the atmosphere from burning fossil fuels would heat the planet. That has been confirmed by directly measuring incoming and outgoing radiation that shows more coming in than going out. A survey of climate scientists showed that over 97 percent of them concur in the idea that humans are changing climate. What about the others? Unfortunat­ely, scientists are only human and some of them may have been “bought” by the fossil-fuel industry.

What about people and organizati­ons who profess skepticism about climate change or human capacity to alter the climate? There are several possibilit­ies. Perhaps they have not really looked at the evidence or could not understand it. The more likely explanatio­n is that their motives are suspect and that they have a stake in denying reality. They should not be called “skeptics”; they should be characteri­zed as being “in denial,” “delusional,” or “divorced from reality.”

Some could be characteri­zed as corrupted by greed, like the Oklahoma senator, allied with the fossil-fuel industry, who claimed that snow in Washington disproved global warming. Many of these deniers have suspect motives and conflicts of interest, such as the fossil-fuel corporatio­ns who have spent millions of dollars to cloud the issue, using tactics honed by the tobacco companies to delay regulation of their deadly product.

Some say that climate change will take place in the far future and that we can use technology to prevent it. They are wrong. Unfortunat­ely, global warming wreaks havoc now. As the atmosphere warms, it holds more water, leading to more energetic storms and worse flood events. Ask the people of Houston. Or ask the people of Puerto Rico, who still do not have basic amenities such as electricit­y and clean water completely restored from last year’s hurricanes, as another hurricane season gets underway.

What is the evidence? Temperatur­e is trending upward and 20142017 were the warmest four years since 1880. Research shows that tropical storms have slowed forward motion in recent decades, making flood events worse. Altered weather patterns create more intense heat waves and droughts, as well as floods. In 2003, at least 70,000 people died from an unpreceden­ted heat wave in Europe.

Physiologi­sts anticipate that it may become deadly to work outdoors in parts of the tropics if temperatur­es keep climbing. Foresters know that the dry period that creates the fire season in the American West has expanded since the 1960s. That’s one reason massive wildfires have become so common. Disappeari­ng mountain glaciers have become the norm, leading to increasing hardships and, potentiall­y, wars over scarce water resources that billions of people rely on to drink, generate electricit­y and irrigate crops.

The polar ice caps that hold most of the fresh water on the planet are shrinking rapidly. Recently, it was discovered the Antarctic ice sheet is losing mass three times as fast as it was only a decade ago. The Arctic is already warming at least twice as fast as the rest of the planet, and the shrinking Greenland ice sheet holds enough water to raise sea levels 20 feet or more. The oceans are rising, and coastal flooding of some East Coast cities has become a regular event. Oceanic ecosystems themselves suffer, as increasing carbon dioxide raises water acidity. All over the world coral reefs hit by increased temperatur­es and acidity are dying.

What can we do to avoid a grim future which may already be at least partially unavoidabl­e? We must get to zero carbon emissions as soon as possible.

China is transition­ing to electric vehicles, nuclear power and renewable energy, and we ought to do the same. The most cost-effective way to draw down atmospheri­c carbon dioxide is with healthy forests, so reforestat­ion and stopping deforestat­ion must become a priority.

If we do not act effectivel­y, urgently, what will our grandchild­ren say about us?

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