Global Warming: The Evidence
by Patrick Mazza and Rhys Roth
A worldwide wave of extreme weather inflicted at least $90 billion in
damage in 1998, more than in the entire 1980s. Last year was also the
hottest on record. While no single weather event or year proves humans are
warming the planet, a powerful scientific case is building. Some of the
most compelling evidence emerged in just the past year.
Greenhouse gases are present in the atmosphere in greater amounts than at
any time in at least 220,000 years. Certainly something is heating the
globe. The century's ten warmest years have all occurred since 1983--seven
in this decade. A new National Science Foundation study based on natural
indicators such as tree rings, ice-cores, and corals finds the last decade
of the millennium has been its hottest. And 1998 was by far the hottest
year. Temperatures surged faster than previously documented to break a
record set in just the previous year, 1997.
Middle and lower latitude mountain glaciers are showing the effects.
University of Colorado glaciologists at Boulder in 1998 reported that those
glaciers have retreated on average at least 60 feet since 1961, and the
rate at which they are melting is increasing. The retreat of mountain ice
in tropical and subtropical latitudes provides "some of the most compelling
evidence yet for recent global warming," Ohio State University researchers
note.
A new study by NASA's Goddard Institute found Greenland glaciers appear to
be spewing icebergs into the ocean faster than in the past. The finding was
unexpected, and raises fears that global sea levels, already projected to
rise 20 inches next century, could increase even faster.
Predictions that global warming will be greatest in the polar regions are
now being borne out. Arctic sea ice has been shrinking by 3 percent each
decade since 1970. Several of the years with the smallest sea ice coverage
were in the 1990s. Around the Antarctic Peninsula, extensive sea ice formed
4 winters out of every 5 in the mid-century. Since the 1970s that dropped
to 1-2 winters out of every 5.
Several Peninsula ice shelves, which attach to the continent but stretch
into the sea, are in retreat. Some of the most dramatic losses came in
1998, when around 2,000 square miles calved into icebergs. The Larsen A ice
shelf, after years of slowly melting away, suddenly disintegrated in 1995.
Scientists have now mounted a death watch for Larsen B and
Wilkens--together three times larger than Delaware.
Since ice shelves already displace water, the loss will not add to rising
ocean levels. But melting northern tundra could have a devastating global
effect. Carbon in tundra soils, equal to one-third that in the atmosphere,
could be released. Tundra researcher George W. Kling of the University of
Michigan says, "Our latest data show that the Arctic is no longer a strong
sink for carbon. In some years, the tundra is adding as much or more carbon
to the atmosphere than it removes."
A warmer atmosphere is expected to cause more evaporation, making for worse
droughts and more deluges. Beginning around 1980, sections of the U.S.,
Europe, Africa, and Asia began to experience more dry spells, while parts
of the U.S. and Europe became much wetter. The National Climatic Data
Center scrutinized U.S. weather records for extremes expected to increase
under global warming. NCDC discovered that wild weather has been surging
since the late 1970s. Statistical analysis showed only 1-in-20 odds that
this was a natural fluctuation. NCDC Chief Scientist Tom Karl commented, "I
would say the climate is responding to greenhouse gases."
Thick, precipitation-prone clouds significantly increased over Australia,
Europe, and the United States between 1951 and 1981. Researchers concluded
the increase is "likely to be related" to human-caused greenhouse gases.
Cloud cover holds in heat after the sun goes down. So nighttime warming is
a significant global warming indicator. Nighttime temperatures are going up
more than twice as fast as daytime temperatures. Extreme summer heatwaves
in the U.S increased 88 percent between 1949-95, with the biggest heat
increases coming at night.
Warming is having devastating impacts on plant and animal life. Coral
reefs, the "rainforests of the ocean," where one-quarter of all marine
species are found, suffered record die-off due to heat-induced bleaching in
1998. "At this time, it appears that only ... global warming could have
induced such extensive bleaching simultaneously throughout the disparate
reef regions of the world," a State Department scientific report concluded.
A dramatic temperature increase off North America's west coast began around
1977. Zooplankton, the microscopic plant-eaters that form the base of the
marine food chain, dropped 70% because warmer waters suppressed colder,
nutrient-rich currents. Indicating food chain collapse, ocean seabirds in
the California Current have declined 90% since 1987.
As the Pacific has warmed, so has Alaska. On the south central coast, cool
temperatures normally keep the spruce bark beetle under control. But with
the warming, beetles have killed most of the trees in a space of three
million acres, one of the largest insect-caused forest deaths in North
American history.
Evidence is mounting that global warming is here and humanity is driving
it. Remaining scientific uncertainty "does not justify inaction in the
mitigation of human-induced climate change and/or the adaptation to it,"
the American Geophysical Union said in a recent statement. The emerging
scientific consensus leaves us with no excuses. We must rapidly transition
from fossil fuels to clean energy. The global climate crisis, perhaps the
greatest challenge in the history of civilization, calls upon us to act
decisively and without delay.
This article is excerpted from a new white paper, Global Warming Is Here:
The Scientific Evidence, available from Climate Solutions, 610 E. 4th St.,
Olympia, WA 98501, USA, phone (360) 352-1763, info@climatesolutions.org
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