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- <text id=89TT0039>
- <title>
- Jan. 02, 1989: Global Warming:Feeling The Heat
- </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 36
- GLOBAL WARMING - Feeling the Heat
- </hdr><body>
- <p>THE PROBLEM: Greenhouse gases could create a climatic calamity
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick
- </p>
- <p> For more than a decade, many scientists have warned that
- cars and factories are spewing enough gases into the atmosphere
- to heat up the earth in a greenhouse effect that could
- eventually produce disastrous climate changes. But until
- recently, the prophets of global warming garnered about as much
- attention as the religious zealots who insist that Armageddon is
- near. When Colorado Senator Timothy Wirth held congressional
- hearings on the greenhouse effect in the fall of 1987, the
- topic generated no heat at all. "We had a very, very
- distinguished panel," Wirth recalled at the TIME Environment
- Conference, "and who was in the cavernous hearing room? Six or
- seven people, and two or three of them were lost tourists."
- </p>
- <p> So Wirth decided to schedule another hearing in the summer,
- hoping hot weather would make people pay attention to the
- greenhouse issue. Sure enough, when the hearing convened last
- June 23, the thermometer read 99 degrees F, a Washington record
- for that day. The room was packed when James Hansen, head of
- NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, turned global
- warming into front-page news at last. "It is time to stop
- waffling so much," he declared. "The evidence is pretty strong
- that the greenhouse effect is here."
- </p>
- <p> Hansen thus became perhaps the most prominent scientist
- willing to say straight out that the earth-warming effect of
- excess carbon dioxide (CO2) and other gases generated by
- industry and agriculture had crossed the line from theory into
- fact. By itself, Hansen's bold assertion was dramatic enough.
- But the unusual string of weather-related disasters that struck
- the world last summer could not have been better timed to drive
- his point home. The heat waves, droughts, floods and hurricanes
- may be previews of what could happen with ever increasing
- frequency if the atmosphere warms 3 degrees F to 8 degrees F by
- the middle of the next century, as some scientists predict.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, the summer's disasters may have had
- nothing to do with the greenhouse effect. They could have been
- random events -- all part of the natural year-to-year
- variations in weather. Many climatologists called Hansen's
- remarks premature and feared that if this summer happens to be
- cool, public worries about the greenhouse effect will quickly
- fade.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, scientists cannot agree on how much global
- warming has occurred, how much more is on the way and what the
- climatic consequences will be, giving policymakers an excuse for
- delay. But no one disputes the fact that the amount of CO2 in
- the atmosphere has risen and continues to increase rapidly and
- that the human race is thus conducting a dangerous experiment
- on an unprecedented scale. The possible consequences are so
- scary that it is only prudent for governments to slow the
- buildup of CO2 through preventive measures, from encouraging
- energy conservation to developing alternatives to fossil fuels.
- </p>
- <p> Some forecasters have suggested that the impact of global
- warming will not be uniformly bad around the world. After all,
- Canada would not complain if the productive corn-growing lands
- of the U.S. Midwest shifted north across the border, and the
- Soviet Union might welcome a warmer, more hospitable Siberia.
- But while the broad outlines of a hotter world are easy to
- draw, more specific projections are riddled with uncertainty,
- since the regional weather patterns that would prevail are
- largely unpredictable. If Canada becomes much dryer than it is
- now, for example, higher temperatures will not help much.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, while some nations will probably end up with a
- more benign climate than they now have, the pace of change
- could be so jarring that the benefits would be lost. "We're
- talking about rates of climate change perhaps 100 times faster
- than at any time in human history," said Stephen Schneider of
- the National Center for Atmospheric Research. Ecosystems will
- not be able to adjust so quickly, he said, "and the faster
- things change, the more likely it is that the impact will be
- negative." Warned Thomas Lovejoy of the Smithsonian Institution:
- "There will be no winners in this game of ecological chairs, for
- it will be fundamentally disruptive and destabilizing, and we
- can anticipate hordes of environmental refugees dwarfing the
- numbers of the Dust Bowl era or the boat people."
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, the same greenhouse effect that may be so
- dislocating made earth hospitable to life in the first place.
- Without a heat-trapping blanket of naturally occurring CO2, the
- planet would have an average surface temperature of only 0
- degrees F instead of 59 degrees F. Reason: like the glass panes
- of a greenhouse, CO2 molecules are transparent to visible light,
- allowing the sun's rays to warm the earth's surface. But when
- the surface gives off its excess heat, it does so not with
- visible light but with infrared radiation. And since CO2
- absorbs infrared rays, some of the excess heat stays in the
- atmosphere rather than escaping into space. How much heat is
- retained depends on how much CO2 is in the air.
- </p>
- <p> Recent research has confirmed that this is more than just
- theory. By drilling deep into Antarctic and Arctic ice,
- scientists have been able to measure the amount of CO2 in air
- bubbles trapped in ancient layers of snow. They have also
- looked at fossilized plant tissues for clues as to how warm the
- air was during the same period. The conclusion: CO2 levels and
- global temperatures have risen and fallen together, over tens
- of thousands of years. And there is evidence from space: Mars,
- which has little CO2 in its atmosphere, has a surface
- temperature that reaches -24 degrees F at best, while Venus,
- with lots of CO2, is a hellish 850 degrees F.
- </p>
- <p> The ebb and flow of CO2 on earth was caused by only natural
- processes until less than 200 years ago. With the arrival of the
- Industrial Revolution in the early 1800s, man suddenly threw a
- new factor into the climatic equation. Carbon dioxide is
- released in large quantities when wood and such fossil fuels as
- coal, oil and natural gas are burned. As society
- industrialized, coal-burning factories began releasing CO2
- faster than plants and oceans, which absorb the gas, could
- handle it. In the early 1900s, people began burning oil and gas
- at prodigious rates. And increasing population led to the
- widespread cutting of trees in less developed countries. These
- trees are no longer available to soak up excess CO2, and whether
- they are burned or left to rot, they instead release the gas.
- By the late 1800s atmospheric CO2 had risen to between 280 and
- 290 parts per million. Today it stands at 350 p.p.m., and by
- 2050 it could reach 500 to 700 p.p.m., higher than it has been
- in millions of years.
- </p>
- <p> But carbon dioxide, once thought to be exclusively
- responsible for the greenhouse effect, is now known to cause
- only half the problem. The rest comes from other gases.
- Chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, are not only destroyers of the
- stratosphere's ozone layer but powerful greenhouse gases as
- well. So are nitrogen oxides, which are pollutants spewed out
- of automobile exhausts and power-plant smokestacks. Another
- greenhouse gas is methane, the primary component of natural
- gas. Methane is also generated by bacteria living in the guts
- of cattle and termites, the muck of rice paddies and the
- rotting garbage in landfills. Each of these sources is fostered
- by human activity -- even the termites, which thrive in the
- clearings left after tropical rain forests are cut down.
- Humanity's contribution to the greenhouse effect comes from so
- many basic activities that man cannot realistically expect to
- stop the process, only slow it down.
- </p>
- <p> A first step toward doing that is to ban the production of
- CFCs, which are used to make plastic foam and as coolants in
- refrigerators and air conditioners. These gases account for an
- estimated 15% of the greenhouse effect. Another strategy is to
- burn as much methane as possible. That adds CO2 to the air, but
- getting rid of the methane is well worth it. Both gases trap
- heat, but as a greenhouse gas, methane traps 20 times as much
- heat as carbon dioxide, molecule for molecule.
- </p>
- <p> Methane from cattle feedlots will be very difficult to
- collect, but the gas in garbage landfills is already being
- tapped and burned at many sites around the U.S. At the Fresh
- Kills landfill on New York City's Staten Island, for example,
- methane that would otherwise have escaped into the air is being
- collected by a gas company and used to heat thousands of homes.
- The technique essentially involves driving a pipe into the
- depths of the garbage, then trapping the gas that rushes out.
- This should be done at all landfills.
- </p>
- <p> Another step that could be taken to counteract global
- warming is to slow -- and ideally stop -- deforestation. But
- that is an enormously complex task, and so a simple companion
- strategy should be adopted at the same time: the planting of
- trees, and plenty of them, to absorb CO2 from the air. "It
- surely has to be one of the most benign things we can do," said
- Gus Speth of the World Resources Institute. Tree planting can be
- encouraged at all levels of society, from individuals putting an
- extra tree or two in their backyards to local communities and
- private organizations planting an acre at a time to provincial
- and national governments reforesting on a more widespread basis.
- </p>
- <p> Admittedly, trees are just a stopgap. Unless a tree is used
- for lumber, it eventually dies and rots or is burned, releasing
- whatever CO2 it has absorbed. But since the rapid pace of change
- may be the greatest danger posed by global warming, stopgaps
- could be important. If nothing else, reforestation will buy time
- to put other preventive measures into place.
- </p>
- <p> Tree planting will have negligible impact, however, if
- people continue to pump CO2 into the atmosphere at current
- rates. While wood and fossil-fuel burning will never be
- eliminated, they can be cut down significantly. An immediate
- way to do so is through conservation. When oil prices soared in
- the 1970s, industries responded by becoming much more energy
- efficient. But the plunge in the price of oil from $36 per bbl.
- in 1982 to less than $12 per bbl. this fall has cooled the
- enthusiasm for conservation. Governments must rekindle that
- interest and boost energy saving by setting or raising minimum
- efficiency standards for automobiles, appliances and other
- machinery.
- </p>
- <p> Although developed countries waste the most energy, there
- are plenty of opportunities for conservation in the developing
- world, where energy-using equipment tends to be older and more
- inefficient. Third World conservation would not only help slow
- greenhouse warming but also let countries save money by reducing
- dependence on energy imports. If the industrialized countries
- expect cooperation, though, they should make available at
- minimal cost the most advanced energy-saving technology,
- especially for power plants, and help finance the purchase.
- </p>
- <p> By far the most efficient and effective way to spur
- conservation is to raise the cost of fossil fuels. Current
- prices fail to reflect the very real environmental costs of
- pumping carbon dioxide into the air. The answer is a tax on CO2
- emissions -- or a CO2 user fee, if that is a more palatable
- term. The fee need not raise a country's overall tax burden; it
- could be offset by reductions in income taxes or other levies.
- </p>
- <p> Imposing a CO2 fee would not be as difficult as it sounds.
- It is easy to quantify how much CO2 comes from burning a gallon
- of gasoline, a ton of coal or a cubic yard of natural gas. Most
- countries already have gasoline taxes; similar fees, set
- according to the amount of CO2 produced, could be put on all
- fossil-fuel sources. At the same time, companies could be given
- credits against their CO2 taxes if they planted trees to take
- some of the CO2 out of the air.
- </p>
- <p> A user fee would have benefits beyond forcing a cutback in
- CO2 emissions. The fuels that generate carbon dioxide also
- generate other pollutants, like soot, along with nitrogen
- oxides and sulfur dioxide, the primary causes of acid rain. The
- CO2 tax would be a powerful incentive for consumers to switch
- from high-CO2 fuels, such as coal and oil, to power sources
- that produce less CO2, notably natural gas. When burned,
- methane generates only half as much CO2 as coal, for example,
- in producing the same amount of energy.
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, though, the world must move away from fossil
- fuels for most of its energy needs. Said Berrien Moore,
- director of the Institute for the Study of the Earth, Oceans and
- Space at the University of New Hampshire: "Even if you cut
- emissions of CO2 in half, the atmospheric concentration will
- keep going up. You're still adding CO2 faster than you're
- withdrawing it, so the balance keeps rising."
- </p>
- <p> Of all the known nonfossil energy sources, only two are far
- enough along in their development to be counted on: solar and
- nuclear, neither of which generates any greenhouse gases at all.
- Solar power is especially attractive. It produces no waste, and
- it is inexhaustible. Not all solar power comes directly from the
- sun: both wind and hydroelectric power are solar, since wind is
- created by the sun's uneven warming of the atmosphere and since
- the water that collects behind dams was originally rain, which
- in turn was water vapor evaporated by solar heating.
- </p>
- <p> But wind and hydroelectric power can be generated at only a
- relatively few sites, and so governments should redouble
- financing for research to develop efficient, low-cost
- photovoltaic power. Photovoltaic cells, which produce electric
- current when bathed in sunlight, were briefly in vogue during
- the energy crises of the 1970s, and while public attention and
- Government funding have waned, research into the technology has
- continued. "The capital costs have come down from about $50 a
- peak watt to $5," said Speth. If they drop to $1, solar power
- will become competitive. That could happen without significant
- Government research support -- but it will happen sooner with
- it.
- </p>
- <p> Sometime early in the next century, solar enthusiasts hope
- to see vast tracts of photovoltaic collectors providing cheap
- electricity that can be transmitted over long distances.
- Alternatively, the electricity could be used to produce hydrogen
- from water. That could open up all sorts of possibilities. Cars,
- for example, could be redesigned to run on hydrogen, and that
- would produce a dramatic reduction in CO2 emissions.
- </p>
- <p> Nuclear power is more controversial; until recently the mere
- mention of it made environmentalists blanch. They had good
- reason, considering the accidents at Three Mile Island and
- Chernobyl, the problem of radioactive waste and the horror
- stories about U.S. weapons plants. But the greenhouse effect is
- forcing some antinuclear activists to rethink their position. "I
- was a strong opponent of the nuclear program in France," said
- Brice Lalonde, France's Environment Under Secretary and a
- former presidential candidate on the Ecologist Party ticket.
- "Now I am reassessing the whole thing." France gets more than
- 70% of its electricity from nuclear plants and has an impressive
- safety record.
- </p>
- <p> Reactors in France, like all conventional reactors, depend
- for their safety in part on the skill and alertness of their
- operators. To minimize the risk of human error, engineers have
- developed designs for much safer types of nuclear reactors. But
- while these reactors, like experimental solar cells, show great
- promise, they are not yet economical enough to go on-line in
- significant numbers. It should therefore be a priority of
- governments to spend more money on research aimed at lowering
- the cost of safe nuclear and solar power and making them
- primary energy sources. Otherwise the global warming that
- results from overreliance on fossil fuels could produce an
- increasingly uncertain and potentially bleak future.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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