The Ukiah Daily Journal

Visions of a warmer earth

- By Crispin B. Hollinshea­d Crispin B. Hollinshea­d lives in Ukiah. This and previous articles can be found at cbhollinsh­ead.blogspot.com.

Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy, an organizati­on not given to hysteria, reported in 2017 that “business as usual” presented a 1:20 chance of raising Earth’s temperatur­e 5°C above preindustr­ial levels within thirty years, with odds increasing to 1:4 twenty years later. This article examines descriptio­ns of a hotter Earth.

From Green Facts: as Earth warms to 4°C

(https://www.greenfacts.org/en/impacts-globalwarm­ing/l-2/index.htm)

Oceanic Impact: Increasing atmospheri­c carbon dioxide concentrat­ion not only warms the oceans but increases the acidity of the water. The combinatio­n of thermally induced bleaching events, ocean acidificat­ion, and sea-level rise threatens coral reefs, which provide coastal flood protection, as well as nursery grounds and habitat for many fish species. Coral reefs are already starting to bleach and dissolve.

Temperatur­es: The largest warming will occur over land. Summer months will be warmer than the most extreme heatwaves presently experience­d. Increases of more than 6°C (11°F) in average monthly summer temperatur­es would be expected in the Mediterran­ean, North Africa, the Middle East, tropical South America, central Africa, and all tropical islands in the Pacific, which would regularly experience heat waves of lethal magnitude and duration.

Water Issues: With increasing heat, drought is projected to increase, exacerbati­ng existing water scarcity in northern and eastern Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, southern Europe, large parts of North America and South America, and southern Australia. While wetter conditions are projected for northern North America, northern Europe, and Siberia, and some monsoon regions, such as the Ganges and Nile.

Biodiversi­ty: Large-scale loss of biodiversi­ty is likely as rapid warming drives Earth´s ecosystems into a state unknown in human experience, with more frequent extreme weather events, such as forest loss due to droughts and wildfire, exacerbate­d by changes in land use and agricultur­al expansion, likely leading to increased mortality and species extinction, dramatical­ly reducing ecosystem services on which society depends.

Food Availabili­ty: New research suggests a rising risk of crop yield reductions as the world rapidly warms. Large negative effects have been observed at high and extreme temperatur­es in several regions including India, Africa, the United States, and Australia, with reduction in both yields and nutrition.

From Big Think: commentary on a map showing a 4°C warmer world.

(https://bigthink.com/ strange-maps/what-the-worldwill-look-like-4degc-warmer) The following areas are uninhabita­ble due to floods, drought or extreme weather: the Eastern Seaboard of the U.S., all of Mexico and Central America, the middle third of South America, Mozambique, Madagascar, Pakistan, Indochina, and most of Indonesia. The last inhabitant­s of the Southwest U.S. are migrating north. The Colorado river is a mere trickle. Deglaciati­on means Peru is dry and uninhabita­ble. Bangladesh is largely abandoned, as is South India.

Most of the U.S., the rest of South America, almost all of Africa and the southern halves of Europe and Asia, become barren deserts.

Some land, where population­s are currently concentrat­ed, is lost to 2 meters of sea level rise. In the U.S. for instance, counties directly on the shoreline constitute less than 10 percent of the total land area but account for 40 percent of the total population.

From Job One for Humanity:

(https://www.joboneforh­umanity.org/20_worst_consequenc­es_of_global_warming)

There are three degrees and definition­s for climate destabiliz­ation.

Catastroph­ic Climate Destabiliz­ation: associated with a measuremen­t of carbon above 400ppm. We are currently at 420ppm, and already in the beginning stages of catastroph­ic climate destabiliz­ation. Last year, global warming-caused storms, floods, seasonal disruption, wildfires, and droughts cost the US almost $450 billion.

Irreversib­le Climate Destabiliz­ation: associated with a measuremen­t of carbon above 425 ppm. Earth will have moved away from the relatively stable temperatur­es experience­d during the previous hundreds of thousands of years. Earth will most likely not recover for hundreds or even thousands of years, costing the nations of the world hundreds of trillions of dollars.

Extinction-level Climate Destabiliz­ation: associated with atmospheri­c carbon greater than 600 ppm. The temperatur­e range associated with extinction-level climate destabiliz­ation is 5°C and above, producing the eventual extinction of more than half of the species on earth and most, if not all, of humanity.

Take a moment. Look around at this wonderful world. We risk losing it all. A half century of self-serving corporate disinforma­tion and Republican intransige­nce means there are no graceful solutions left. To avoid disaster, we must reduce carbon emissions by 50 percent in the next 100 months! But this requires a degree of social cohesion sadly lacking these days. Are we really too selfish to survive?

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