Business Insider - Morgan McFall-Johnsen
NASA astronauts Megan McArthur and Mark Vande Hei speak with
Insider from the International Space Station, August 11, 2021.
NASA
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"We've been very saddened to see fires over huge sections of the Earth, not just the United States," NASA astronaut Megan McArthur told Insider on a recent call from the space station.
Wildfires are raging across the US, Canada, Greece, Turkey, Italy, Algeria, and Siberia.
McArthur's crewmate, French astronaut Thomas Pesquet, has posted photos of those blazes from above on Twitter.
Wildfires are one of the most visible hallmarks of the climate crisis. This summer, they've come alongside historic heat waves and the western US's worst drought in the 20-year history of the US Drought Monitor.#Forestfires extending their smoke over the Mediterranean Sea, a scary sight from the @Space_Station. My thoughts go out to all the people affected and the firefighters working there. https://t.co/JIP5LEWR7E pic.twitter.com/FMUmJIaBPU
— Thomas Pesquet (@Thom_astro) August 4, 2021
A new report from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warns that "fire weather" will probably increase by 2050 in North America, Central America, parts of South America, the Mediterranean, southern Africa, north Asia, Australia, and New Zealand. That means more days where conditions are warm, dry, and windy enough to trigger and sustain wildfires.
The amount of fuel available to burn in those places — dry vegetation — is also likely to increase as rising temperatures cause the air to absorb more moisture and bring about more droughts.
The IPCC report, released Monday, is the first part of the group's sixth assessment, which recruits hundreds of experts to analyze years of scientific research on climate change. Those experts determined that global temperatures will almost certainly rise at least 1.5 degrees Celsius above the preindustrial average by 2040.Fires in Peloponnesos, Greece. Yesterday @UN's @IPCC_CH released a report clearly stating our climate is changing and we need to make hard choices as a species to avoid the worst. My heart goes out to all affected by the 🔥 and the intense heat in the Mediterranean and California pic.twitter.com/albhYJmjp8
— Thomas Pesquet (@Thom_astro) August 10, 2021
That may sound small, but it brings about huge changes across the planet, including further melting of glaciers and polar ice caps. This contributes to sea-level rise, and water expands as it heats up, so it is virtually certain that oceans will continue rising through the end of this century. In the best case scenario, the IPCC authors said, oceans will rise by nearly a foot over the next 80 years.
But there is still time to prevent 2 degrees Celsius of warming and the even more catastrophic changes that would bring, the report said.
"Over many years, scientists around the world have been sounding this alarm bell," McArthur said. "This is a warning for the entire global community. It's going to take the entire global community to face this and to work through these challenges."
Astronauts can see the climate crisis unfolding across the planet
A photo of Hurricane Laura taken from the International Space
Station on August 25, 2020.
Chris Cassidy/NASA |
Future astronauts will probably observe even more of that. The IPCC report found that combinations of extreme events like heavy rainfall and hurricane-caused storm surge, paired with rising seas, will continue to make flooding more likely in coming decades.
Other satellites can also see signs of drought, like dried-up reservoirs across California.
"The other thing that we can see, of course, is the very thin lens of atmosphere," McArthur said. "That is what protects our Earth and everything on it. And we see how fragile that is, and we know how important it is."
The atmosphere glows above the southeastern African coast, as seen
from the International Space Station.
NASA |
In 2019, the concentration of carbon in the atmosphere was higher than at any time in at least 2 million years, according to the IPCC report. Concentrations of methane and nitrous oxide — more potent greenhouse gases than carbon dioxide — were higher than at any time in at least 800,000 years.
On August 4, 2021, an astronaut on the International Space Station
shot a photo of the Dixie fire’s thick smoke plume.
NASA/JSC |
"That is the place that we need to be able to live. So it's important that we take ownership of whatever we can do to help maintain it," NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei told Insider.
Links
- Images from space show California’s forests and lakes drying out in a record mega-drought
- Climate scientists want you to know it’s not too late
- Climate-related changes to Earth’s ice and oceans are now ‘irreversible for centuries to millennia,’ a new report says
- Bootleg Fire in Oregon is generating dangerous fire clouds and pyrocumulonimbus thunderstorms
- Wildfires and record temperatures in Canada are generating ‘fire-breathing’ pyrocumulonimbus thunderstorms
- Climate disasters in the US broke records in 2020. Scientists may now know why: Earth was the hottest it has ever been.
- Global Carbon Budget 2020
- ‘The Day After Tomorrow’ film foretold a real and troubling trend: The Atlantic ocean’s circulation system is weakening
- Drought maps show the western US at its driest in 20 years – a ticking time bomb for even more fires and power failures
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