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- <text id=89TT0027>
- <title>
- Jan. 02, 1989: Preparing For The Worst
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 02, 1989 Planet Of The Year:Endangered Earth
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PLANET OF THE YEAR, Page 70
- Preparing for the Worst
- </hdr><body>
- <p>If the sun turns killer and the well runs dry, how will humanity
- cope?
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt
- </p>
- <p> If the nations of the world take immediate action, the
- destruction of the global environment can be slowed
- substantially. But some irreversible damage is inevitable. Even
- if fossil-fuel emissions are cut drastically, the overall level
- of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will still increase --
- along with the likelihood of some global warming. Even if toxic
- dumping is banned outright and that ban is strictly enforced,
- some lakes and aquifers will be tainted by poisons that have
- already been released. Even if global population growth could
- somehow be cut in half, there would still be more than 45
- million new mouths to feed next year, putting further strain on a
- planet whose capacity to sustain life is already under stress.
- </p>
- <p> Sooner or later the earth's human inhabitants, so used to
- adapting the environment to suit their needs, will be forced to
- adapt themselves to the environment's demands. When that day
- comes, how will societies respond? How well will the world cope
- with the long-term changes that are likely to be in store?
- </p>
- <p> To help answer those questions, political scientist Michael
- Glantz of the National Center for Atmospheric Research has
- pioneered the use of a technique known as "forecasting by
- analogy" to predict the effects on society of future climatic
- change. In a series of case studies, Glantz and his colleagues
- analyzed the response of state and local governments to actual
- environmental events across the U.S., from a 12-ft. rise in the
- level of Utah's Great Salt Lake to the depletion of the aquifer
- that supplies groundwater to eight Great Plains states.
- </p>
- <p> When Glantz's forecasting technique is applied to the rest
- of the world, two things become clear. One is that virtually
- every long-term environmental change is occurring in miniature
- somewhere on the planet, whether it is a regional warming trend
- in sub-Saharan Africa or the vanishing coastline in Louisiana.
- The other is that Homo sapiens is an immensely resourceful
- species, with an impressive ability to accommodate sweeping
- change. In countries and regions hit by climatic upheavals,
- people have come up with a variety of solutions that are likely
- to have broad applicability to the global problems of tomorrow.
- </p>
- <p> How would societies respond, for example, if the oceans were
- to rise by 3 ft. to 5 ft. over the next century, as some
- scientists have predicted? One option would be to construct
- levees and dikes. The Netherlands, after all, has flourished
- more than 12 ft. below sea level for hundreds of years. Its
- newest bulwark is a 5.6-mile dam made up of 131-ft. steel locks
- that remain open during normal conditions, to preserve the
- tidal flow that feeds the rich local sea life, but can be closed
- when rough weather threatens. Venice is beginning to put into
- place a 1.2-mile flexible seawall that would protect its
- treasured landmarks against Adriatic storms without doing
- ecological damage to the city's lagoon.
- </p>
- <p> Shoring up cities such as New York, Los Angeles, Paris,
- London and Rio de Janeiro would require equally monumental
- measures. In the U.S. the Environmental Protection Agency
- estimates that the cost of protecting developed coastal areas
- could reach $111 billion. Southern Louisiana, which is losing
- land to the Gulf of Mexico at the alarming rate of one acre
- every 16 minutes, has already drawn up an ambitious mix of
- programs. In the biggest project, a $24 million pumping station
- would divert millions of gallons of silt-rich Mississippi River
- water onto the coastline to help stop saltwater intrusion and to
- supply sediment that will build up the eroding land. At least
- one parish is considering plans for a backstop dike to give
- residents time to escape should the sea finally reach their
- doors.
- </p>
- <p> Poorer countries have fewer options. Wracked by periodic
- floods, Bangladesh cannot simply evacuate the "chars" -- bars of
- sand and silt in the Ganges Delta -- where millions of people
- have set up camp. But the government has drawn up plans for a
- network of raised helipads and local flood shelters to
- facilitate the distribution of emergency aid if, as seems
- inevitable, disaster strikes again. Meanwhile, the country can
- only appeal to its Himalayan neighbors to do something about
- the root cause of the flooding: the deforestation of watersheds
- in India and Nepal that has turned seasonal monsoons into
- "unnatural disasters."
- </p>
- <p> The problems of agriculture are likely to be critical in the
- next century, as growing populations, deteriorating soil
- conditions and changing climates put even more pressure on a
- badly strained food-supply system. In parts of sub-Saharan
- Africa, that system has broken down periodically over the past
- 20 years, resulting in the familiar TV images of children with
- swollen bellies and relief camps filled with hungry people.
- </p>
- <p> What is not so well known is that hundreds of grass-roots
- organizations in Africa are taking action to cope with
- environmental change. Somalia has launched a vigorous
- antidesertification drive that includes a ban on cutting
- firewood. In Burkina Faso villagers have responded to steadily
- dwindling rainfall by building handmade dams and adapting
- primitive water-gathering techniques. Even so simple a trick as
- putting stones along the contour lines of a field to catch
- rainwater can make the difference between an adequate harvest
- and no harvest at all.
- </p>
- <p> Necessity has spawned invention in marginal farmlands around
- the world. The Chinese, threatened by a desert that is spreading
- at the rate of 600 sq. mi. a year, are planting a "green Great
- Wall" of grasses, shrubs and trees 4,350 miles across their
- northern region. In Peru archaeologists have revived a
- pre-Columbian agricultural system that involves dividing fields
- into patterns of alternating canals and ridges. The canals
- ensure a steady supply of water, and the nitrogen-rich sediment
- that gathers on their floors provides fertilizer for the crops.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps no one is better prepared for hot, dry summers than
- Israel's farmers. The Israelis, using drip irrigation and other
- techniques, have made plants bloom on land that has been barren
- for millenniums. Portions of the arid Negev, an area once
- written off as largely uncultivable, today grow fruit, flowers
- and winter vegetables eagerly sought by European markets.
- Through a process known as "fertigation" -- dripping precise
- quantities of water and nutrients at the base of individual
- plants -- crops can be grown in almost any soil, even with
- brackish water.
- </p>
- <p> Plant genetics is another option that needs to be
- energetically pursued. At the University of California at
- Riverside, plant physiologist Anthony Hall is working on a way
- to make cowpeas more tolerant to heat. Other scientists are
- using genetic engineering to transfer genes from bacteria that
- act like natural insecticides. But though they have tried,
- scientists have not yet been able to develop farm crops that
- are drought resistant. Says Hall: "You can't grow plants
- without water."
- </p>
- <p> There are things people can do if the well runs dry. Several
- communities located near the sea have built desalinization
- plants. Denver, meanwhile, has pioneered the unsavory concept
- of turning sewer water into drinking water. In 1985 the city
- opened an experimental plant that produces 1 million gal. a day
- of high-quality H2O from treated effluent.
- </p>
- <p> Some scientists have suggested that the depletion of the
- ozone layer could be counteracted by a variety of Star Wars-like
- techniques. They include lofting frozen ozone "bullets" into the
- upper atmosphere and blasting apart ozone-depleting molecules
- in the air with huge terrestrial laser beams. But such grandiose
- schemes would be unreliable and could change weather patterns
- in unpredictable ways. In the end, it may be safer and cheaper,
- if inconvenient, to cope with ozone depletion by wearing
- wide-brimmed hats, sunglasses and sunscreen.
- </p>
- <p> Man has always shown a great capacity for adjusting to
- change. Past generations have survived floods and ice ages,
- famines and world wars. But when dealing with the environment,
- there is a grave danger in relying on adaptation alone:
- societies could end up waiting too long. Many of the global
- processes under way, like the wholesale destruction of species,
- are irreversible. Others, like global climate changes caused by
- man, are so profound that if allowed to progress too far, they
- could prove to be overwhelming. Simple prudence suggests that
- taking forceful preventive action now -- to save energy, to
- curb pollution, to slow population growth, to preserve the
- environment -- will give humanity a much better chance of
- adapting to whatever comes in the future.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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