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- <text id=93HT0838>
- <title>
- 1988: Is The Earth Warming Up?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1988 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- July 4, 1988
- ENVIRONMENT
- Is the Earth Warming Up?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Yes, say scientists, but that may not explain this year's heat
- wave
- </p>
- <p> The Great Plains has become a dust bowl, and people are moving
- north into Canada's uplands to seek work. Even in Alaska,
- changing ocean currents are boosting the fish catch. New York
- is sweltering in 95 degree weather that began in June. In the
- Southeast the hot spell started six weeks earlier...
- </p>
- <p> That picture of the future is all too familiar to many
- meteorologists. To some, it makes the drought that is crippling
- the nation's midsection seem an ominous harbinger of things to
- come. Because of the greenhouse effect, a process by which
- natural and man-made gases trap solar heat in the earth's
- atmosphere, the gradual warming of the glove is inevitable, in
- the view of many scientists. But until now, most had cautiously
- avoided definitive statements about precisely when such an
- effect might take place.
- </p>
- <p> Testifying before a congressional committee last week, James
- Hansen, an atmospheric scientist who heads NASA's Goddard
- Institute, riveted Senators with the news that the greenhouse
- effect has already begun. During the first five months of 1988,
- he said, average worldwide temperatures were the highest in the
- 130 years that records have been kept. Moreover, Hansen
- continued, he is 99% certain that the higher temperatures are
- not just a natural phenomenon but the result of a buildup of
- carbon dioxide (CO2) and other gases from man-made sources,
- mainly pollution from power plants and automobiles. Said
- Hansen: "It is time to stop waffling and say that the evidence
- is pretty strong that the greenhouse effect is here."
- </p>
- <p> His findings were based on monthly readings at 2,000
- meteorological stations around the world. The data showed that
- temperatures over the past century had increased in winter more
- than in summer, and that areas in high latitudes like Paris and
- New York had warmed up more than regions near the equator. That
- was consistent with computer models. "These are all expected
- signatures of the greenhouse effect," Hansen said. Still, he
- and other leading scientists warned against concluding that the
- greenhouse effect is directly responsible for the heat wave that
- is parching areas of the U.S. "Why didn't we have a drought
- last summer?" he asks. "You can only say that the probability
- of drought is increased by the greenhouse effect."
- </p>
- <p> The phenomenon that Hansen describes is actually a natural,
- beneficial atmospheric process that many scientists believe has
- gone awry--perhaps irreversibly. Without the greenhouse effect,
- life on earth would be a nightmare of subzero temperatures.
- Instead, naturally produced CO2 and other gases, mainly from
- plant and animal life, behave in the atmosphere like the glass
- in a greenhouse: they let the visible warming rays of the sun
- in but inhibit the escape of infrared rays back into space.
- </p>
- <p> Since the Industrial Revolution, however, increased production
- of CO2 and other gases, such as nitrous oxide, has made the
- protective atmospheric shroud even denser. If scientists are
- correct, the atmospheric blanket of pollutants is now capturing
- far more of the earth's excess heat, resulting in global
- warming.
- </p>
- <p> Hansen contends that over the past century world-wide
- temperatures have risen by about 1.2 degrees F, compared with
- the natural variation over such a period of only 0.4 degrees F.
- "Warming has been sufficient that it is unlikely to have been
- accidental," he notes. But other scientists question whether
- this can be attributed to the greenhouse effect. Stephen
- Schneider of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in
- Boulder agrees with Hansen that this has been the warmest decade
- on record and that the planet is gradually heating up. But the
- evidence, he says, is circumstantial. Contends Schneider: "It
- doesn't prove the greenhouse effect."
- </p>
- <p> Other scientists note that global climate moves in broad
- historical cycles of warming and cooling tens of thousands of
- years long. Astronomical cycles, volcanoes, the interplay of
- deserts, oceans, cloud cover, even the methane produced by
- termites, can affect the density of the atmospheric greenhouse.
- Declares Chester Ropelewski, a climate specialist with the
- Maryland-based Climate Analysis Center: "It's still not clear
- whether this is the CO2 signal. The hard evidence isn't there."
- </p>
- <p> Whether the greenhouse effect has arrived or not, some
- scientists calculate that global temperatures could increase
- between 3 degrees and 9 degrees F by the year 2050. If that
- happens, even hotter, dryer summers are on the way, probably
- accompanied by a gradual melting of polar ice caps and glaciers
- that will cause sea levels to rise several feet by mid-century.
- By the it is probable that more CO2 production, from sources
- as diverse as industry and rampant deforestation, will play an
- increasingly important role in heating up the earth. Even
- Hansen's scientific critics hope his testimony, however
- premature, will prod people into taking measures to ease the
- greenhouse effect by conserving energy and cutting back on
- burning fossil fuels. The alternative, though, may be even less
- pleasant for many. As Democratic Senator Wendell Ford of
- Kentucky pointed out last week, the only major energy source
- that might replace fossil-fuel plants is nuclear power.
- </p>
- <p>-- By David Brand. Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York and Dick
- Thompson/Washington
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-