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A REVIEW OF
James Hansen's STORMS of my GRANDCHILDREN
By Doug Meyer
answer that question. Even so, he goes ahead with this estimate: "Although ice sheet inertia may prevent a large sea level rise before the second half of the cen­tury, continued growth of greenhouse gases in the near term will make that re­sult practically inevitable, out of our children's and grandchildren's control."
Storms of My Grandchildren James Hansen
December 2009 Hardcover 320 pages Bloomsbury USA
Time out. Greenwash alert.
In the endless battle between the human mind and the human animal, it looks like the animal is winning. James Hansen has written an expose of the science and politics of global warming that should undermine any remaining faith one might have in a good outcome for civilization. We get the sense of global schizo­phrenia as he reviews the pathetic response to global warming so far. And yet, though the science of the mind is impressive in its reach, it too is maddening. After all the research and reports have been digested, the precautionary prin­ciple is still the basis for its advocacy. The forces involved simply dwarf and defy human time scales, comprehension, computation, and efficacy. Thus the animal escapes.
Note that in the near term and within several decades are mostly within the timeframe of the effects of ocean thermal inertia, meaning that much of Earth's average surface air temperature rise in that time is already committed to occur.
Also, the phrases "continued growth of greenhouse gases" and "continued growth of atmospheric carbon dioxide" are tricky. Hansen is NOT talking emis­sions here. Because of the limited ability of the carbon cycle to absorb long-last­ing CO2, a global 50% cut in CO2 emissions would still result in increasing CO2 in the atmosphere. So, in the near term, there's no question that we'll see "con­tinued growth of atmospheric carbon dioxide".
Now we can re-read Dr. Hansen's words and make some stronger inferences: The loss of Arctic summer sea ice by mid-cen­tury is certain, along with the warming feedback that comes with it. And the sub­stantial collapse of both the West Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets in the next hun­dred years will raise global sea level several meters. This will occur even in the unlikely event that the world cuts emissions 50% in the near (but yet unspecified) future. The much larger East Antarctic ice sheet would presumably require substantially longer to disintegrate.
"Storms of My Grandchildren" is also a self-critique by the man who has been at the very center of humanity's awakening to global warming. What happens to this man, and his science, when the discoveries appear antithetical to the "progress" of hu­man society? The message gets distorted, that's what happens, and the blame lies on both the sending and receiving ends, as the author suggests. This is James Hansen's masterful attempt to wipe the slate clean and try, one last time, to share the burden of his understanding with all of us.
But that knowledge emerged only after a journey spanning 65 million years of Earth history, and numerous extended stopovers of millennia, centuries, and sometimes just decades along the way. That's the good news. These results did NOT magi­cally appear from a climate model! But it's also the bad news. Apparently, the les­sons of paleoclimate don't translate well into today's dysfunctional political scene. Imagine that. So something really big is gonna give. Someday. We're not sure ex­actly when.
Storms
We all know what happens when warm and cold air masses collide. Hansen tells us that as the ice sheets slowly tumble into the sea, the high latitude oceans will be cooled by the effect of melting icebergs. Mean­while, the tropics will be getting warmer, and warmer air holds more moisture. Com­bine higher sea levels and bigger storms and what have you got? Hansen cites the '93 Superstorm, which at one point stretched from Central America to Nova Scotia, as a smaller cousin to the kinds of storms the world can expect by century's end. He adds "It is not necessary to put the entire island of Manhattan under water to make the city dysfunctional and, given prospects for con­tinuing sea level rise, unsuitable for rede­velopment." As the sea keeps slowly rising, hundreds of millions of coastal residents around the world may not be welcomed with open arms by their inland neighbors. A collapse of global governance looms.
Ice sheets
In the event of "continued growth of at­mospheric carbon dioxide" then "within several decades", the Arctic's floating sea ice will be gone by the end of each sum­mer. This would make it "difficult to imag­ine how the Greenland ice sheet could sur­vive", according to Hansen. OK, but stay with me here, the momentum and time frames are essential to understand.
This is the "urgent" message of the book,
again, from a paleoclimate perspective. Only in the last few years has the science revealed that the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets can disintegrate in less than a century, rather than millennia, as previously thought. Not quite the bombshell you were expecting? I agree, so let's look closer.
Hansen notes that the 2007 IPCC estimate of about half a meter of sea level rise this century results from treating continental-scale ice sheets as "giant rigid ice cubes that melt only slowly". This ignores ice shelves, (where ice sheets' co­lossal buttressing tongues meet the sea), melt water lubrication of the ice sheet base, and rapid, large-scale glacial flow to the sea from deep within the interior.
So, how much and how fast? Hansen refers to a period during Earth's recov­ery from the last ice age when, "there was no discernable lag between the time of maximum solar forcing of the ice sheet and the maximum rate of melt" and that sea level "increased 4 to 5 meters per century for several consecutive cen­turies—an average rate of 1 meter every 20 or 25 years." He also cites a study of the Last Interglacial that "presented evidence that a 2- to 3-meter sea level rise probably occurred in a period of 50 years or less". Temperatures during the Last Interglacial averaged only 1 degree Celsius above today, a warming that every single IPCC scenario shows we'll exceed in the next few decades.
Collapse of the West Antarctic ice sheet would raise sea level a few meters, enough to eventually displace hundreds of millions of people world wide. Green­land, perhaps equally vulnerable, has even more ice. So, when will the ongoing "softening up" of ice sheets reach a point of no return, where the "dynamical process of collapse takes over"? Hansen acknowledges that science today can't
After ice
If humanity burns the remaining fossil fuels this century as expected, all of the Earth's ice would be committed to eventually slide into the ocean, perhaps requiring a couple more centuries after this one to reach the ice-free state, with sea levels 75 meters above today. At this point, an eventual methane-hydrate warming "could be added on top of the fossil fuel warming".
About 55 million years ago, the Earth was a much warmer planet with no ice. Orbital changes caused a several million year warming of about 2 to 3 degrees Celsius. Probably under stress by the warming, ocean currents re-oriented in a way that fed a lot of energy up onto shallow continental shelves in the Pacific. In the sediments there lay some 3,000 gigatons of frozen methane hydrates, roughly the same amount of carbon as in all the fossil fuels. Over the course of two separate thousand-year periods, all of that methane was released into the atmosphere. The earth warmed somewhere between 5 and 9 degrees Celsius, with temperatures perhaps 13 degrees warmer than today.
If the Earth's been ice-free before, then, even though today's civilization is clearly not long for this world, humanity should still be able to survive, right? Maybe not. Keep in mind that the human carbon punch has happened 10,000 times faster than natural climate forcings. The carbon cycle's major diminishing feedback (weathering of rocks) requires thousand-year time frames at a mini­mum to be effective. It isn't clear how warm the oceans need to be before trigger­ing an even bigger methane hydrate release than the one 55 million years ago.
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