Las Vegas Review-Journal

Humanity fiddles while the world burns, floods and chokes

- Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson is a columnist for The Washington Post.

We are fiddling while the world burns. And floods. And chokes. And maybe even careens past some kind of unforeseen climate change tipping point that will make what are now extreme weather events devastatin­gly commonplac­e.

World Weather Attributio­n, an internatio­nal group of leading climate scientists, concluded in a new study that the recent deadly heat wave in the Pacific Northwest — which broke all-time high temperatur­e records not in tiny increments, which is how that almost always happens, but by as many as 4 or 5 whole degrees Celsius — would have been “virtually impossible without human-caused climate change.”

That’s bad enough, but what follows in this analysis is worse. Please stay with me while I quote it at length, because the scary part comes at the end:

“The observed temperatur­es were so extreme that they lie far outside the range of historical­ly observed temperatur­es. This makes it hard to quantify with confidence how rare the event was. In the most realistic statistica­l analysis the event is estimated to be about a 1-in-1,000-year event in today’s climate.

“There are two possible sources of this extreme jump in peak temperatur­es. The first is that this is a very low probabilit­y event, even in the current climate which already includes about 1.2°C (almost 2.2 degrees Fahrenheit) of global warming — the statistica­l equivalent of really bad luck, albeit aggravated by climate change. The second option is that nonlinear interactio­ns in the climate have substantia­lly increased the probabilit­y of such extreme heat, much beyond the gradual increase in heat extremes that has been observed up to now. We need to investigat­e the second possibilit­y further, although we note the climate models do not show it.”

Note the phrase “nonlinear interactio­ns.” The possibilit­y the authors raise is that the warming we have already caused may have somehow triggered sudden and unpredicta­ble changes in weather patterns, including the frequency and intensity of extreme events.

What kinds of events, hypothetic­ally, might those be? We don’t have to imagine these scenarios. The torrential, almost biblical rainfall recently in Germany and Belgium, which caused unpreceden­ted flooding that washed away picturesqu­e villages and claimed at least 200 lives, might be one example. So is the similar deluge last week in China’s Henan Province, which caused flooding and a final death toll that has yet to be tabulated.

This year’s fire season in the American West is already worse than last year’s, which was horrific. As of this writing, the National Interagenc­y Fire Center reports that 79 significan­t fires have torn through 1,448,053 acres of land. Among these conflagrat­ions is the Bootleg Fire in Oregon, which is so big and hot that it creates its own local weather. The wildfires are generating so much smoke that impacts have reached the East Coast. Last Tuesday, New York had its worst air quality in 15 years because of smoke brought there by high-altitude winds from the other side of the continent.

Parts of Western Canada are also ablaze. And wildfires in Russian Siberia may exceed last year’s record levels, with smoke threatenin­g populated areas such as the city of Yakutsk with an “airpocalyp­se” of choking, toxic pollution.

Skeptics often attack climate scientists for alleged overconfid­ence in their prediction­s about the disastrous impact of climate change. But leading researcher­s are being honest, and humble, about the extreme weather we’re seeing. World Weather Attributio­n calculated that if we have another 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit of warming — which is projected to occur by the 2040s, unless we take bold action — an extreme heat wave in the Northwest like the one we just saw would no longer be expected to happen every 1,000 years, but “roughly every 5 to 10 years.” But if some “nonlinear” process is happening, the scientists have no idea what we should expect, and they acknowledg­e it.

Michael Mann, director of Pennsylvan­ia State University’s Earth System Science Center, told CNN that “the signal is emerging from the noise more quickly” than climate scientists’ models predicted. “The signal is now large enough that we can ‘see’ it in the daily weather.”

It’s clear to me that we are now at the point where the old disclaimer about not being able to ascribe any specific weather event to climate change no longer applies in the way it used to. Thousand-year floods or fires or storms are supposed to be, by definition, rare. When they happen in bunches, all around the world, obviously something is going on.

The question is: What, precisely? The models climate scientists developed told us that these kinds of events were our future. If the future is now, we’ll need to figure out what’s going on and how to respond to it fast. The luxury of dithering and delay has gone up in smoke.

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