|
Well, they're both problems that we seriously avoided for years. Although I'm sometimes accused of being pro-Industry when I make the argument for catalyst, that really isn't the case.
Humanity has (collectively) never given a thought to the environment. Even the proto-Native Americans burned half the trees down in North America and wiped out the native horses and possibly the elephants, as well. Maybe the more modern peoples we think of as Native Americans became as pro-environment as they are because their ancestors learned their lessons the hard way. I occasionally wonder whether the Younger-Dryas episode wasn't catalyzed by massive burning and deforestation in America and Asia.
The work you did in Climatology sounds interesting, and I've also seen references that go back decades before Wallace Broecker started his own studies. Could you have ever guessed that the northern polar ice would be melting as fast as it is now? This has even taken me by surprise. The Earth's albedo has swung wildly since the middle 1980s, and planetary cloud cover is currently increasing as rapidly as the ice is melting.
The development of the massive temperature gradient between ground and stratosphere is likewise troubling. Ironic, ain't it, that the same Apocalypse Surfers who rightly fear climate change haven't been able to see that the increase "chemtrails" may be an artifact of high-altitude "explosive freezing" that wasn't common years ago? What was once a slowly-freezing condensation trail is now flash-frozen vapor boil-off. It looks cool, too.
At this point, I'm pessimistic about the climatological outcome. I think we hit the trigger point either around 1960 or 1985, looking at the weather data -- but that's just a wild-ass guess. What we now call the PDO -- Pacific Decadal Oscillation -- may be the pre-stadial climate "flicker". It fits in well with Broecker's data and his idea about climatic "flickering".
But take anything I say with a pound of salt, since I'm a layman who is prone to pessimism anyway.
Still, as happy as I am about being "proven right" -- if either term applies -- it's frustrating to watch as we waste the few remaining decades we have left before a) the climate becomes much harsher, and b) the Age of Oil winds down. It's like we're living through a fine Indian Summer that's about to be ended by a series of Nor'easters.
We've known about the oil situation since 1956, and the climate situation since the 1970s. We've laughed ourselves hoarse at suggestions that we might have to "suck it up" someday.
WWBKLD? Well, if I Ruled The World, I'd initiate "Manhattan Projects" aimed at developing decentralized, renewable, large-scale energy generation; and for studying the climate. At least those two projects! We also need to figure out how to sustain a progressing world culture without an energy use increase of at least 2.5% per year. Planning for the prospective evacuation of Canada, Northern Europe and Northern Asia would also be a good idea. And keeping an eye on other potential sources of trouble -- Near-Earth Object collisions, supervolcano activity, the stability of Cumbre Viejo in the Canaries, and a hundred other minor worries -- would be a source of low-cost "insurance", too.
So what's going on instead? War and religious fanaticism. Once again, maybe ancient people weren't so different after all. Fire, ice, gravel, and the war of the Gods during Ragnarok sounds similar to what we're facing now.
But this is all just so much ranting on my part. I plan to see the movie tonight or within the next few days, and I won't be surprised if we get a few more scorching summers, followed by a climate flip-flop. And if Team Bush retakes the White House, the Nor'easter will be arriving early.
--bkl
|