Texarkana Gazette

Climate change is worse than once thought

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WASHINGTON—Climate scientists missed a lot about a quarter century ago when they predicted how bad global warming would be.

They missed how bad wildfires, droughts, downpours and hurricanes would get. They missed how much ice sheets in West Antarctica and Greenland would melt and contribute to sea level rise. They missed much of the myriad public health problems and global security issues.

Global warming is faster, more extensive and just plain worse than they once thought it would be, scientists say now.

Internatio­nal negotiator­s meet next week in Poland to discuss how to ratchet up the fight against climate change in what’s called the Conference of Parties. The world’s understand­ing of global warming has changed dramatical­ly since the first conference in March 1995. Since then the globe on average has warmed nearly three-quarters of a degree but that’s not even half the story.

That global annual temperatur­e increase is slightly lower than some early 1990s forecasts. Yet more than a dozen climate scientists told The Associated Press that without the data currently available and today’s improved understand­ing of the climate, researcher­s decades ago were too conservati­ve and couldn’t come close to realizing how global warming would affect daily lives.

One scientific study this month counted up the ways— both direct and indirect—that warming has already changed Earth and society. The total was 467 .

“I don’t think any of us imagined that it would be as bad as it’s already gotten,” said University of Illinois climate scientist Donald Wuebbles, a co-author of the recent U.S. National Climate Assessment . “For example, the intensity of severe weather. We didn’t know any of that back then. And those things are pretty scary.”

In the 1990s, when scientists talked about warming they focused on the average annual global temperatur­e and sea level rise. The problem is that people don’t live all over the globe and they don’t feel average temperatur­es. They feel extremes—heat, rain and drought—that hit them at home on a given day or week, said Pennsylvan­ia State University climate scientist Richard Alley.

“The younger generation­s are growing up where there is no normal,” University of Washington public health and climate scientist Kristie Ebi said, pointing out that there have been 406 consecutiv­e months when the world was warmer than the 20th century average.

More recently economists have joined scientists in forecastin­g a costly future. Yale economist William Nordhaus, who won the 2018 Nobel prize for economics for his work on climate change and other environmen­tal issues, told the Associated Press that his calculatio­ns show climate change would cost the United States $4 trillion a year at the end of the century with a reasonable projection of warming.

The way science has looked at global warming has changed over the last quarter century because of better knowledge, better computers, better observatio­ns, more data—and in large part because researcher­s are looking more closely at what affects people most. Add to that what many scientists see as an accelerati­on of climate change and the picture is much bleaker than in the 1990s.

Back then, Michael Mann was a graduate student exploring global warming.

“I honestly didn’t think that in my mid-career we would be watching the impacts of climate change play out on my television” nor that they would be so strong, said Mann, now a prominent climate scientist at Pennsylvan­ia State University. It is playing out with wildfires, rain-soaked hurricanes, flooding, drought, heat waves and other extreme weather, he said.

Scientists now better understand how changes in currents in the air—such as the Jetstream—and the rain cycle can cause more extreme weather. And recent research shows how climate change is altering those natural factors.

The biggest change in the science in the last quarter century is “we can now attribute changes in global temperatur­es and even some extreme events to human activity,” said Sir Robert Watson, a former top NASA and British climate scientist who chaired the United Nations’ Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change from 1997 to 2002.

With improved knowledge and tools, scientists can better understand extreme weather such as hurricanes and droughts, and they can run complex computer simulation­s that attribute extremes to human-caused warming from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas, Watson said.

Scientists attribute extreme events to human-caused warming by comparing what happened in real life to simulation­s without heat-trapping gases from fossil fuels. They’ve concluded climate change has caused more rain in hurricanes Harvey , Maria, Katrina and others.

Studies have shown climate change has worsened droughts, downpours and heat waves, such as the Russian one in 2010, that have killed thousands of people. And they have linked climate change to the growing amount of land in the western United States burned by wildfire, which wasn’t considered a big climate issue a couple decades ago, said University of Utah fire scientist Phil Dennison.

From air pollution triggered by wildfires that caused people in Northern California to don breathing masks to increased asthma attacks that send children to the hospital, medical experts said climate change is hurting people’s bodies.

“We’re seeing surprises,” public health professor Ebi said. “We’re projecting changes and we’re seeing them sooner than we expected.”

That includes once-tropical disease carrying mosquitoes in Canada and warm water shellfish bacteria showing up in Alaska , she said.

Massachuse­tts General Hospital emergency room physician Dr. Renee Salas, who wrote a chapter in the medical journal Lancet’s annual climate health effects reports, said these aren’t abstract statistics, but real patients.

“When I had to tell a tearful mother that I needed to admit her 4-year-old daughter for an asthma attack, her fourth visit in a week, climate change was truly top of my mind because I knew her disease was due to rising pollen levels,” Salas said.

Massive ice sheets in western Antarctica and Greenland are melting much faster than scientists figured a quarter century ago.

Antarctica has lost nearly 3 trillion tons of ice since 1992, enough to cover Texas nearly 13 feet deep, scientists reported in June. Greenland has lost more than 5 trillion tons in the same period.

Melting in Antarctica and Greenland in the last few years “literally doubled our projection­s of the sea level rise at the end of this century,” said Mann of Penn State.

Non-experts who reject mainstream science often call scientists “alarmists,” yet most researcher­s said they tend to shy away from worst case scenarios. By nature, scientists said they are overly conservati­ve.

In nearly every case, when scientists were off the mark on something, it was by underestim­ating a problem not overestima­ting, said Watson, the British climate scientist.

But there are ultimate worst cases. These are called tipping points, after which change accelerate­s and you can’t go back. Ice sheet collapses. Massive changes in ocean circulatio­n. Extinction­s around the world.

“In the early 1990s we only had hints that we could drive the climate system over tipping points,” said Jonathan Overpeck, environmen­t dean at University of Michigan. “We now know we might actually be witnessing the start of a mass extinction that could lead to our wiping out as much as half the species on Earth.”

 ?? AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File ?? ■ In this June 20, 2017, file photo, a local temperatur­e sign reads 120 degrees Fahrenheit as temperatur­es climb to near-record highs in Phoenix. Scientists say climate change is faster, more extensive and worse than they thought a quarter century ago.
AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File ■ In this June 20, 2017, file photo, a local temperatur­e sign reads 120 degrees Fahrenheit as temperatur­es climb to near-record highs in Phoenix. Scientists say climate change is faster, more extensive and worse than they thought a quarter century ago.

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