With Speed and Violence: Why Scientists Fear Tipping Points in Climate Change (3 page)

I hope I have retained my skepticism through this journey. One of the starting points, in fact, was a reexamination of whether the climate skeptics-those who question the whole notion of climate change as a threatmight be right. Much of what they say is political hyperbole, of more benefit to their paymasters in the fossil-fuel lobby than to science. Few of them are climate scientists at all. But in some corners of the debate, they have done good service. They have, for instance, provided a useful corrective to the common assumption that all climate change must be manmade. But my conclusion from this is the opposite of theirs. Far from allowing us to stop worrying about man-made climate change, the uncertainties they highlight underline how fickle climate can be and how vulnerable we may be to its capricious changes. As Wally Broecker, one of the high priests of abrupt planetary processes, says, "Climate is an angry beast, and we are poking it with sticks."

This book is a reality check about the state of our planet. That state scares me, just as it scares many of the scientists I have talked to-sober scientists, with careers and reputations to defend, but also with hopes for their own futures and those of their children, and fears that we are the last generation to live with any kind of climatic stability. One told me quietly: "If we are right, there are really dire times ahead. Having a daughter who will be about my present age in 2050, and will be in the midst of it, makes the issue more poignant."

 

WELCOME TO THE ANTHROPOCENE

 

I

THE PIONEERS

The men who measured the planet's breath

This story begins with a depressed Swedish chemist, alone in his study in the sunless Nordic winter after his marriage to his beautiful research assistant, Sofia, had collapsed. It was Christmas Eve. What would he do? Some might have gone out on the town and found themselves a new partner. Others would have given way to maudlin sentiment and probably a few glasses of beer. Svante Arrhenius chose neither release. Instead, on December 24, 1894, as the rest of his countrymen were celebrating, he rolled up his sleeves, settled down at his desk, and began a marathon of mathematical calculations that took him more than a year.

Arrhenius, then aged thirty-five, was an obdurate fellow, recently installed as a lecturer in Stockholm but already gaining a reputation for rubbing his colleagues the wrong way. As day-long darkness gave way to months of midnight sun, he labored on, filling book after book with calculations of the climatic impact of changing concentrations of certain heattrapping gases on every part of the globe. "It is unbelievable that so trifling a matter has cost me a full year," he later confided to a friend. But with his wife gone, he had few distractions. And the calculations became an obsession.

What initially spurred his work was the urge to answer a popular riddle of the day: how the world cooled during the ice ages. Geologists knew by then that much of the Northern Hemisphere had for thousands of years been covered by sheets of ice. But there was huge debate about why this might have happened. Arrhenius reckoned that the clue lay in gases that could trap heat in the lower atmosphere, changing the atmosphere's radiation balance and altering temperatures.

He knew from work half a century before, by the French mathematician jean Baptiste Fourier and an Irish physicist called John Tyndall, that some gases, including carbon dioxide, had this heat-trapping effect. Tyndall had measured the effect in his lab. Put simply, it worked like this: the gases were transparent to ultraviolet radiation from the sun, but they trapped the infrared heat that Earth's surface radiated as it was warmed by the sun. Arrhenius reasoned that if these heat-trapping gases in the air decreased for some reason, the world would grow colder. Later dubbed "greenhouse gases," because they seemed to work like the glass in a greenhouse, these gases acted as a kind of atmospheric thermostat.

Tyndall, one of the most famous scientists of his day and a friend of Charles Darwin's, had himself once noted that if heat-trapping gases were eliminated from the air for one night, "the warmth of our fields and gardens would pour itself unrequited into space, and the sun would rise upon an island held fast in the iron grip of frost." That sounded to Arrhenius very much like what had happened in the ice ages. Sure enough, when he emerged from his labors, he was able to tell the world that a reduction in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels of between a third and a half would cool the planet by about 8 degrees Fahrenheit-enough to cover most of northern Europe, and certainly every scrap of his native Sweden, in ice.

Arrhenius had no idea if his calculations reflected what had actually happened in the ice ages. There could have been other explanations, such as a weakening sun. It was another eighty years before researchers analyzing ancient air trapped in the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica found that ice-age air contained just the concentrations of carbon dioxide that Arrhenius had predicted. But as he reached the end of his calculations, Arrhenius also became intrigued by the potential of rising concentrations of greenhouse gases, and how they might trigger a worldwide warming. He had no expectation that this was going to happen, but it was the obvious counterpart to his first calculation. And he concluded that a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide would raise world temperatures by an average of about io"F.

How did he do these calculations? Modern climate modelers, equipped with some of the biggest supercomputers, are aghast at the labor involved. But in essence, his methods were remarkably close to theirs. Arrhenius started with some basic formulae concerning the ability of greenhouse gases to trap heat in the atmosphere. These were off the shelf from Tyndall and Fourier. That was the easy bit. The hard part was deciding how much of the solar radiation Earth's surface absorbed, and how that proportion would alter as Earth cooled or warmed owing to changes in carbon dioxide concentrations.

Arrhenius had to calculate many things. The absorption capacity of different surfaces across the globe varies, from 20 percent or less for ice to more than 8o percent for dark ocean. The capacities for dark forest and light desert, grasslands, lakes, and so on lie between these two extremes. So, armed with an atlas, Arrhenius divided the surface of the planet into small squares, assessed the capacity of each segment to absorb and reflect solar radiation, and determined how factors like melting ice or freezing ocean would alter things as greenhouse gas concentrations rose or fell. Eventually he produced a series of temperature predictions for different latitudes and seasons determined by atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide.

It was a remarkable achievement. In the process he had virtually invented the theory of global warming, and with it the principles of modern climate modeling. Not only that: his calculation that a doubling of carbon dioxide levels would cause a warming of about io°F almost exactly mirrors the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's most recent assessment, which puts r0.4°F at the top of its likely warming range for a doubling of carbon dioxide levels.

Arrhenius presented his preliminary findings, "On the Influence of Carbonic Acid in the Air upon the Temperature of the Ground," to the Stockholm Physical Society in December 1895 and, after further refinements, published them in the London, Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine andJournal of Science. There he offered more predictions that are reproduced by modern computer models. High latitudes would experience greater warming than the tropics, he said. Warming would also be more marked at night than during the day, in winter than in summer, and over land than over sea.

But he had cracked an issue that seemed to interest no one else. The world forgot all about it. Luckily for Arrhenius, this labor was but a sideshow in his career. A few years after completing it, he found fame as the winner of the 1903 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, for work on the electrical conductivity of salt solutions. Soon, too, he had a new wife and a child, and other interests-he dabbled in everything from immunology to electrical engineering. He was an early investigator of the northern lights and a popular proponent of the idea that the seeds of life could travel through space.

But after the First World War, his mood changed. The optimism of his generation, which believed that science and technology could solve every problem, crumbled in the face of a war that killed so many of its sons. He railed against the wastefulness of modern society. "Concern about our raw materials casts a dark shadow over mankind," he wrote, in an early outburst of twentieth century environmental concern. "Our descendants surely will censure us for having squandered their just birthright." His great fear was that oil supplies would dry up, and he predicted that the United States might pump its last barrel as early as 1935. He advocated energy efficiency and proposed the development of renewable energy, such as wind and solar power. He sat on a government commission that made Sweden one of the first countries to develop hydroelectric power.

Many Swedes today see Arrhenius as an environmental pioneer and praise his efforts to promote new forms of energy. He would have been bemused by this appreciation. For one thing, he never made the connection between his work on the greenhouse effect and his later nightmares about disappearing fossil fuels. He knew from early on that burning coal and oil generated greenhouse gases that would build up in the air. But he rather liked the idea, writing in 1908: "We may hope to enjoy ages with more equable and better climates, especially as regards the colder regions of the Earth, ages when the Earth will bring forth much more abundant crops for the benefit of a rapidly propagating mankind." But he had concluded with some sadness that it would probably take a millennium to cause a significant warming. And when he later began to perceive the scale of industrial exploitation of fossil fuels, his fear was solely that the resources would run out.

For half a century after Arrhenius's calculations, the prevailing view continued to be that man-made emissions of carbon dioxide were unlikely to have a measurable effect on the climate anytime soon. Nature would easily absorb any excess. From time to time, scientists did measure carbon dioxide in the air, but local variability was too great to identify any clear trends in concentrations of the gas.

The only man to take the prospect of greenhouse warming seriously was a British military engineer and amateur meteorologist, Guy Callendar. In a lecture at the Royal Meteorological Society in 1938, he said that the few existing measurements of carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere suggested a 6 percent increase since 1900, that this must be due to fossil fuel burning, and that the implication was that warming was "actually occurring at the present time." Like Arrhenius, Callendar thought this on balance rather a good thing. And like Arrhenius, he saw his findings pretty much ignored.

The next person to make a serious effort was Charles David Keeling, a young student at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, in La Jolla, California. He began monitoring carbon dioxide levels in the mid-1950s, first in the bear-infested hills of the state's Yosemite National Park, where he liked to go hiking, and later, in the hope of getting better data, in the clean air 14,000 feet up on top of Mauna Loa, a volcano in Hawaii. Keeling took measurements every four hours on Mauna Loa, in the first attempt ever to monitor carbon dioxide levels in one place continuously. He was so serious about his measurements that he missed the birth of his first child in order to avoid any gaps in his logbook.

The results created a sensation. Keeling quickly established that in such a remote spot as Mauna Loa, above weather systems and away from pollution, he could identify a background carbon dioxide level of 315 parts per million (ppm). The seasonal cycling of carbon dioxide caused an annual fluctuation around this average between summer and winter. Plants and other organisms that grow through photosynthesis consume carbon dioxide from the air, especially in spring. But during autumn and winter, photosynthesis largely stops, and the photosynthesizers are eaten by soil bacteria, fungi, and animals. They exhale carbon dioxide, pushing atmospheric levels back up again. Because most of the vegetation on the planet is in the Northern Hemisphere, the atmosphere loses carbon dioxide in the northern summer and gains it again in the winter. Earth, in effect, breathes in and out once a year.

But Keeling's most dramatic discovery was that this annual cycle was superimposed on a gradual year-to-year rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels-a trend that has become known as Keeling's curve. The background concentration of 315 ppm that Keeling found on Mauna Loa in 1958 has risen steadily, to 320 ppm by 1965, 331 ppm by 1975, and 380 ppm today.

The implications of Keeling's curve were profound. "By early 1962," he later wrote, "it was possible to deduce that approximately half of the CO2 from fossil fuel burning was accumulating in the air," with the rest absorbed by nature. By the late 196os he had noticed that the annual cycling of carbon dioxide was growing more intense. And the spring downturn in atmospheric levels was beginning earlier in the year-strong evidence that the slow annual increase in average levels was raising temperatures and creating an earlier spring.

Keeling personally supervised the meticulous measurements on Mauna Loa until his death, in 2005. In his final year, this generally mild man picked up the public megaphone one last time to warn that, for the first time in almost half a century, his instruments had recorded two successive years, 2002 and 2003, in which background carbon dioxide levels had risen by more than 2 ppm. He warned that this might be because of a weakening of the planet's natural ability to capture and store carbon in the rainforests, soils, and oceans-nature's "carbon sinks." He feared that nature, which had been absorbing half the carbon dioxide emitted by human activity, might be starting to give it back-something that, in his typically understated way, he suggested "might give cause for concern."

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