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12-29-2002


Approved; wvl
From: "Karen Claxon" kclaxon@earthlink.net


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Global warming evidence mounts;
Flurry of reports show a withering ice cap
David Perlman, Chronicle Science Editor
Monday, December 23, 2002
San Francisco Chronicle, page A8

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/1
2/23/MN226990.DTL

>From the tropics to the poles, evidence is growing stronger than ever
that Earth's climate is warming dangerously.

In the Arctic Ocean, floating masses of sea ice are shrinking and
splitting apart, and the massive Greenland ice cap melted more this past
summer than
ever before.  Meanwhile, warming ocean temperatures are endangering
coral reefs in the tropics.

At the annual fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San
Francisco earlier this month, a flurry of new reports examining evidence
of global climate change all tell the same story.

If the trends continue unchecked, scientists say, rising sea levels
will drown coastlines.  Droughts in some regions -- and increased
rainfall in others -- will alter harvests drastically. And other climate
disruptions will destabilize regional ecologies and global economies.

Some of these alarming phenomena may be due to the natural climate
variability that the planet has seen over millions of years. But most
scientists agree, after years of debate, that humans and their addiction
to fossil fuels are at least partly to blame.

"It is humans who are clearly forcing the abrupt climate change we see
right now," said Richard B. Alley of Pennsylvania State University, who
recently chaired a National Research Council committee looking
specifically at climate change.

So-called greenhouse gases trap the sun's radiation much the way glass
windows trap heat inside a home or a greenhouse. The most powerful of
those
gases is carbon dioxide, which comes primarily from burning fossil fuel,
while other gases include methane, sulfur dioxide and ozone.

THE BUSH REPORT

A recent NRC report, which the Bush administration requested last year
when
scientists criticized the White House for its slow response to growing
evidence of global warming, concluded that "human-induced warming" will
continue through the 21st century.

While it conceded great uncertainties in the many models of climate
trends that experts have produced, the report predicted that the
planet's climate would warm by 2.5 to 10.4 degrees Fahrenheit by the
century's end due to human activity.

Signs of the striking pace of that trend came in reports from many
scientists who monitor the ice of the globe's far north.

The Arctic's sea ice -- large masses of snow-covered ice that float
everywhere around the polar latitudes -- usually covers 2.4 million
square
miles of the ocean north of Canada, Greenland and Russia in September,
the height of the ice season.

This past summer, however, measurements showed that the sea ice had
decreased by nearly a half-million square miles. The flat ice floes left
wider sections of open water between them and became extremely thin in
many areas, reported Ted Scambos of the National Snow and Ice Data
Center in Boulder, Colo.

It marked the most abrupt change in the ocean's ice cover that
scientists monitoring the region have seen in 24 years, said Mark
Serreze of the data
center. Records kept by Icelandic fishermen indicate the cover may not
have been so low for centuries.

"I was really surprised by the change," Serreze said. "This was the
craziest summer season I've ever seen up there."

MELTING FASTER THAN EVER

Equally ominous was a report by Konrad Steffen, a glaciologist at the
University of Colorado, on Greenland's vast ice cover, second only in
size to Antarctica. It was melting faster this year across nearly
265,000 square miles than at any period in recorded history, Steffen
said.

The ice sheet is a mile and a half thick in some places. As meltwater
from the surface seeps through crevices in the ice, it loosens the edges
of the
sheet and causes the ice to flow more swiftly to the sea, where it
breaks off into icebergs.

If the entire Greenland ice sheet were to completely melt -- admittedly
an unlikely event, at least in the near future -- then scientists
calculate
that sea levels would rise by a globally disastrous 23 feet.

Steffen had a firsthand experience of the dangers of melting ice. He and
his colleagues were camped on the normally hard-frozen Greenland ice
last June when their camp and equipment were flooded under a foot of
meltwater and they had to be rescued by helicopter.

The high Arctic is by no means the only part of the world where climate
change is becoming more dramatic. Scientists are equally concerned about
the impact of changes on tropical oceans.

KILLING CORAL

Coral reefs are living creatures. As they die, their calcite skeletons
build up the reefs over millions of years. They are a crucial part of
the world's marine ecosystems, vital to the productivity of many
tropical fisheries.

Most reefs are in shallow waters near continental and island coasts,
where
human-caused destruction is widespread from coastal pollution, from
tourists trampling the reef organisms, from fishermen ravaging them, and
from the hulls of ships grinding over them.

But five years ago, the corals in many parts of the world were afflicted
by a mysterious episode of bleaching that slowed their growth and in
many regions killed them outright. Researchers note that the bleaching
has coincided with increasing ocean temperatures.

"There is growing agreement that doubling of the carbon dioxide in
the atmosphere means a 15 percent decline in the coral population," said
Robert W. Buddemeier, a senior chemist with the Kansas Geological
Survey, who has studied the impact of climate change on coral reefs.

"By the end of the century, with the effects of increasing levels of
carbon dioxide on temperature and on ocean chemistry, the corals will be
in the worst shape we've seen in the past 50 million years. Things are
really dicey," he added.

NO TOUGH MEASURES

The growing evidence of damage from climate change has goaded the Bush
administration to push its own research program, although the president
does not support any tough measures to control greenhouse gas emissions,
including the Kyoto Protocol agreed to by most industrialized nations.

Earlier this month, Assistant Secretary of Commerce James Mahoney,
an      atmospheric physicist who is Bush's point man on global warming,
staged a  "workshop" in Washington where 1,500 people from industry,
government, academic and environmental organizations worked on plans for
a "strategy for climate change research."

"There are still any number of science questions to be resolved,"
Mahoney told reporters at the AGU meeting in San Francisco. He conceded,
however, that already "we will most likely need profound changes in
greenhouse gas
emissions. "

But to many analysts, time is wasting. Global warming will cause "major
political instabilities in the developing world that could disrupt the
global economy," said Lester R. Brown, founder of the Earth Policy
Institute and a noted environmental analyst who spent 10 years as a
policy adviser in the Department of Agriculture.

FOOD SUPPLY IMPACT

If measures aren't taken soon to curb greenhouse gas emissions, the
changes in climate will force rapid changes in the way the world's food
crops are grown. That has important implications for feeding the world's
growing population, expected to increase to at least 9 billion by 2050.

"The vast corn belt of the Northern Hemisphere, for example, will become
hotter and dryer, and that change can't be resolved merely by creating
new
corn belts further north, because the soils further north are not the
same at all," Brown said.

"Each global increase of 1 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit)
around the world will reduce grain yields like rice and wheat, as well
as corn, by
at least 10 percent," he said.

And because aquifers are being tapped at an increasing pace throughout
the world and water tables are falling, the outcome will soon mean a
devastating blow to agriculture -- particularly in the developing world,
he said.

"This disruption by a combination of climate change and water shortages
has the potential for creating political instabilities on a scale that
we
can't even foresee," Brown declared.

E-mail David Perlman at dperlman@sfchronicle.com.

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Климат

29.12 INFOTERRA: Fw: Global Warming Evidence Mounts

29.12 Re: INFOTERRA: Free Stones Global Warming Concert

15.12 Climate Change Could Come Fast and Furious

15.12 Further action needed to reach EU climate change target, projections show

15.12 GLOBAL TEMPERATURE NEAR RECORD FOR 2002

11.11 Во время прошедшей в октябре этого года в Индии восьмой Конференции Сторон Рамочной конвенции ООН об изменении климата состоялась презентация Всемирнойконференции по изменению климата, проведение которой намечено на 29 сентября - 3 октября 2003 года в Москве. Презентацию провела российская делегация совместно с Институтом глобального климата и экологии и РоссийскойАкадемией Наук.

26.10 7 октября 2002 года вышел в свет доклад Финансовой инициативы ЮНЕП подназванием "Изменение климата и сектор финансовых услуг". Финансовая инициатива ЮНЕП представляет собой партнерство ЮНЕП и 295 финансовыхучреждений, озабоченных состоянием окружающей среды.

30.09 Role of rocket emissions in ozone loss

23.09 Климат: КАЗАХСТАН: ОЗАБОЧЕНЫ МЕТАНОМ И ГЛОБАЛЬНЫМ ПОТЕПЛЕНИЕМ

31.08 Более подробная информация о концепции биотической регуляции окружающей среды, включая ее популярное изложение и соотнесенность с такими современными проблемами как лесная политика России, региональные изменения климатаи рост народонаселения, представлена на сайте http://www.biotic-regulation.pl.ru. Там же можно найти полные тексты научных публикацийпо тематике биотической регуляции, а также высказать свое мнение или критическое замечание.

08.08 Climate victory: Philippines province rejects coal for renewable energy

04.08 Political Climate Cools for Fight on Global Warming

18.07 Climate Change Impacts on Pacific Island States Freshwater Resources

20.06 Preserving options Short-term action required to avoid long-term climate damage

17.06 Изменение климата будет играть основную роль в истощении озонового_слоя.

08.06 ПЯТАЯ ВСТРЕЧА РАБОЧЕЙ ГРУППЫ ОРХУССКОЙ КОНВЕНЦИИ ПО РВПЗ

07.06 ИЗМЕНЕНИЕ КЛИМАТА: Евросоюз ратифицировал Киотский протокол. Что ждет российских политиков и производителей

07.06 Bush U-turn on global warming... well, sort of

03.06 Warmer Climate Fooling Flowers

31.05 Санкт-Петербург, 25 мая 2002 г. Сегодня, в день приезда в Санкт-Петербург президента США, Гринпис провел пресс-конференцию, на которой призвал Америкуприсоединиться к Киотскому протоколу.

31.05 В день приезда Президента США Дж.Буша в С.Петербург, у вас есть возможностьознакомится с официальной позицией Гринпис по вопросам, связанным с отказомСША ратифицировать Киотский протокол по изменению климата.

31.05 в Москве завершился трехдневный семинар "Смягчение отрицательных последствий изменения климата в странах с переходной экономикой: преимущества и перспективы снижения выбросов парниковых газов".Семинар был проведена Центром "Эко-Согласие" в сотрудничестве с Третьей рабочей группой Межправительственной группы экспертов по изменению климата(МГЭИК), государственными и неправительственными организациями стран ННГ.Обсуждались результаты исследования Третьей рабочей группы МГЭИК, опубликованные в докладе "Изменение климата 2001: смягчение последствий".

20.05 26-28 мая в Санкт-Петербурге пройдет стратегически важнаяконференция: КОНФЕРЕНЦИЯ BASREC ПО СОЗДАНИЮИСПЫТАТЕЛЬНОГО ПОЛИГОНА ПО ОСУЩЕСТВЛЕНИЮГИБКИХ МЕХАНИЗМОВ КИОТСКОГО ПРОТОКОЛА

15.04 ВОПРОС О ПОДГОТОВКЕ К РАТИФИКАЦИИ КИОТСКОГО ПРОТОКОЛА РАССМАТРИВАЛСЯПРАВИТЕЛЬСТВОМ РФ

04.04 СМЯГЧЕНИЕ ОТРИЦАТЕЛЬНЫХ ПОСЛЕДСТВИЙ ИЗМЕНЕНИЯ КЛИМАТА В СТРАНАХ СПЕРЕХОДНОЙ ЭКОНОМИКОЙ

26.03 Цитата из доклада г-на Германа Герритсена (фирма NEDECO) на первых общественных слушаниях по ОВОС проекта завершениястроительства КЗС (дамбы) 31 января 2002:

26.03 Шельфовый лед Антарктиды разрушается с угрожающей скоростью, - предупреждаютамериканские ученые

26.03 что же говорят о проблемах глобального потепления ведущие специалистыстраны в области климатологии?

18.03 CLIMATE CHANGE: WHAT CAN BE DONE?

07.03 ВСТУПЛЕНИЕ В СИЛУ КИОТСКОГО ПРОТОКОЛАОТВЕЧАЕТ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫМ ИНТЕРЕСАМ РОССИИОбращение представителей российских неправительственных организацийк Правительству Российской Федерации

04.03 Петербург пережил необычную зиму

07.02 CORPORATE RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHANGE

07.02 Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei, in co-operation with the World BusinessCouncil for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) and the World ResearchInstitute (WRI), organise for the 1(superscript: st) of March 2002 adiscussion workshop on the Greenhouse gas (GHG) accounting and reportingrelated to the Kyoto Protocol.

31.01 In a new paper for "Climate Policy" (Elsevier) entitled



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