Parts of the Arctic were 16℃ warmer than normal in February. Bernhard Staehli / shutterstock |
Then came last month. February didn't break climate change records – it obliterated them. Regions of the Arctic were were more than 16℃ warmer than normal – whatever constitutes normal now. But what is really making people stand up and notice is that the surface of the Earth north of the equator was 2℃ warmer than pre-industrial temperatures. This was meant to be a line that must not be crossed.
Two degrees was broadly interpreted as the temperature that could produce further, potentially runaway warming. You can think of it as a speed limit on our climate impact. But it's not a target speed. If you are driving a car carrying a heavy load down a steep hill you're often advised to change down from top gear and keep your speed low, as if you go too fast your brakes will fail and you will be unable to stop. Less braking means more speed which means less braking – a dangerous runaway feedback loop. Hopefully the hill flattens out and you have enough straight road ahead to recover. If you don't then you will be stopping much more abruptly.
February smashes earth's all-time global heat record by a jaw-dropping margin. |
More carbon dioxide in the atmosphere means higher temperatures. There is already one positive feedback loop in operation; the extra warming from our emissions is increasing the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere, which further increases temperatures. Fortunately, this is not a very strong feedback loop.
Unfortunately, there seem to be other, much more powerful ones lurking in the event of further warming. Tipping points such as the thaw of permafrost and release of the very powerful greenhouse gas methane in large quantities would drive world temperatures well beyond the 2℃ threshold.
Even if we came to our collective senses and rapidly reduced carbon emissions at that point, we would still have to revert to drastic geoengineering to rein in further warming. There is no guarantee that such climate brakes will work. If they fail, our civilisation would be on a collision course with a much hotter planet.
Permafrost may contain a huge global warming time bomb. Galyna Andrushko / shutterstock |
Have you heard any political speeches referring to these recent climate change records? Not one of the major Republican presidential candidates even "believes" in human-produced climate change, let alone that it is something to worry about.
How was the stock market this morning? It appears febrile enough to lurch from euphoric boom to catastrophic bust on the basis of bland statements from central bankers but proves remarkably deaf to evidence that the entire industrial and financial system is headed for disaster.
Know what's trending on Twitter as I write? A photoshopped giant dog, the latest Game of Thrones trailer and Kim Kardashian's naked body. Actually, it's mainly Kim Kardashian's naked body and people's responses to it. Followed by people's responses to the responses.
It would be churlish of me to deny people the pleasure of looking at pictures of a photograph of a cuddly dog adjusted in order to make it appear both cute and monstrous. But we appear disinterested, either through denial or desensitisation, to the environmental changes happening right in front of our eyes.
There are sure to be more climate records broken this year. But we treat them as we treat new fashions, phones or films. More novelty, newer features, more drama. We seem unable to understand that we are driving such changes. Record breaking changes that will ultimately break our civilisation, and so scatter all that we obsess and care about.
Links
- This is what will happen to the climate in the next 100 years
- Sure, winter felt chilly, but Australia is setting new heat records at 12 times the rate of cold ones
- It's been Australia's hottest ever October, and that's no coincidence
- The tropical steam-engine: how does El Niño warm the entire globe?
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