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Earth

3-5 Degree Rise in Arctic Temperatures Called 'Inevitable' (theguardian.com) 302

An anonymous reader quotes the Guardian: Sharp and potentially devastating temperature rises of 3C to 5C in the Arctic are now inevitable even if the world succeeds in cutting greenhouse gas emissions in line with the Paris agreement, research has found.

Winter temperatures at the north pole are likely to rise by at least 3C above pre-industrial levels by mid-century, and there could be further rises to between 5C and 9C above the recent average for the region, according to the UN. Such changes would result in rapidly melting ice and permafrost, leading to sea level rises and potentially to even more destructive levels of warming. Scientists fear Arctic heating could trigger a climate "tipping point" as melting permafrost releases the powerful greenhouse gas methane into the atmosphere, which in turn could create a runaway warming effect. "What happens in the Arctic does not stay in the Arctic," said Joyce Msuya, the acting executive director of UN Environment...

Even if all carbon emissions were to be halted immediately, the Arctic region would still warm by more than 5C by the century's end, compared with the baseline average from 1986 to 2005, according to the study from UN Environment. That is because so much carbon has already been poured into the atmosphere. The oceans also have become vast stores of heat, the effect of which is being gradually revealed by changes at the poles and on global weather systems, and will continue to be felt for decades to come.

The findings were presented at the UN Environment assembly Wednesday, where a report written by 250 scientists and experts from over 70 countries also warned that "damage to the planet is so dire that people's health will be increasingly threatened unless urgent action is taken."
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3-5 Degree Rise in Arctic Temperatures Called 'Inevitable'

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 16, 2019 @11:48AM (#58283984)

    I'm sure some "cogent, studied, factually-handy, helpful and altruistic" Republican friends will be here to child-splain to us that this is all a hoax, inevitable, not happening, but also unstoppable and we shouldn't try.

    We at some point have to listen to science. Obviously since we haven't kicked these long-time-oil-funded denialists to the curb entirely, we aren't to that point yet.

    So the question becomes : How long are we going to entertain these no-credential no-science-background 1950's "I got mine's" and their Fox News hot air before we ignore them and begin to really address this?

    I'm tired of their lies, always the same predictable shit in the face of scientific facts they will never acknowledge - and never read except to take single lines out of context as if that debunks the rest of it.

    It's time to debunk their Big Tobacco playbook and forget them.

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      "We have just 12 years to change everything otherwise we're all doooooooooomed." - Courtesy of every flappy headed left wing environmentalist since the 1970's. Personal favorite, was in 1990 if we don't do something now - RIGHT NOW - the world will end in 12 years. Man it's you've been crying wolf for over 100 years, on 12 year cycles and it still hasn't happened...and yet you wonder why fewer people support it.

    • by kick6 ( 1081615 )

      We at some point have to listen to science.

      Gotta love a lefitst authoritarian who demands we listen to science when it allows him to grab more power as in this case, and ignore it when it tells him that there are only 2 genders, and the brain differences are quantifiable in the womb. This isn't about science, it never was. It's about scientists getting their next grant to pay their bills which feeds people like you using it to consolidate more power.

  • by Mspangler ( 770054 ) on Saturday March 16, 2019 @12:15PM (#58284096)

    Been there, done that. Tee-shirt is found in the mud and or ice cores. So plan on six meters of sea level rise.

    http://academic.emporia.edu/ab... [emporia.edu]

    If we get all the way to the Pliocene we could have 25 meters of sea level rise. Wikipedia has plenty on the Pliocene Climactic Optimum, so you can look it up yourself.

  • by Kohath ( 38547 )

    We need multiple stories per day about what someone predicts might happen 50 years from now. We will call it "news", even though they are just predictions of the distant future and, rather than being new, they are all more-or-less the same.

  • Read the report. (Score:5, Informative)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Saturday March 16, 2019 @12:36PM (#58284194) Journal
    Here's a link to the actual report, [unenvironment.org] in case anyone wants to read it. It's a slow download.

    If you look at the "recommendations" section, you can see what they want us to do:

    "Current patterns of consumption, production and inequality are not sustainable....[Solutions] include changes in lifestyle, consumption preferences and consumer behaviour on the one hand, and cleaner production processes, resource efficiency and decoupling, corporate responsibility and compliance on the other hand. ...Efforts to combat biodiversity loss must also address poverty eradication, food security challenges, gender inequality, systemic inefficiencies and corruption in governance structures and other social variables.

    So there it is, that's what we have to do to stop global warming: you need to change your consumption preferences, and all those social variables.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Saturday March 16, 2019 @01:33PM (#58284492) Homepage Journal

      Doesn't sound unreasonable. Americans consume a lot more than those in Europe but have a similar or lower quality of life, and much of Europe could actually do a lot better.

      • Doesn't sound unreasonable. Americans

        I see, those Americans are the ones who need to consume less. The good Europeans like you are fine.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Did you actually stop reading in the middle of that sentence because you were so offended by the first half of it?

          • I read the part where you want other people to change. You have no intention of changing, of course. It's always the other people.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • But while I may want to do some sacrifice, e.g. I am already trying to use only public transport and biking, low electricity footprint, I am rioting in the street if you try to touch to my meat consumption. It is one thing to not have bitten at the forbidden fruit. But now I have eaten it and it is very tasty, I am not giving it up until I am dead. Eating tasty stuff is one of the only few guilty pleasure I truly have. I am doing it until I am dead or unable to.
      • Americans consume a lot more than those in Europe but have a similar or lower quality of life

        People in the United States are much wealthier than those in Europe in general, with a much higher quality of life. From the OECD Society at a glance figures [mises.org], Sweden and Germany have about the same average disposable income as Alabama, Kentucky and Montana, not exactly considered economic power houses. Places like Portugal or Poland are at half of Mississippi's level. Most European countries fall within the bottom t

      • Americans consume a lot more than those in Europe

        This is why I always fight you about spreading pollution across populations.

        An American and a European consume roughly the same amounts of everything.

        America as a country manufactures a fuckload more than European countries. This, of course, results in more pollution. And yet here you sit insinuating that Americans, individually, are greedy pigs next to the oh so wonderful European.

        Fuck off with that shit. Your un-nuanced view of pollution is fucking annoying.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          No, it's consumption.

          As one example, European homes tend to be much more efficient and require a lot less heating and cooling.

    • you need to change your consumption preferences

      I will deeply respect the first environmentalist I meet who tells me he's switched to taking cold showers to Save The Planet(tm).

      At least ethically, if not scientifically - so far they've all wanted to force others to change but maintain their high consumption ways personally. They say it won't make a difference if only they do it - millions of them say this.

      • I will deeply respect the first environmentalist I meet who tells me he's switched to taking cold showers to Save The Planet(tm).

        Is that the only metric you'll accept, or is it okay with you if they switched to solar to heat their water?

      • Hot showers take very little energy. My gas bill in the summer months is tiny. You want someone to take an action that is almost purely symbolic.

        I respect people who take actions and spend their money to make much bigger impacts on greenhouse gasses. You can probably reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than taking cold showers by eliminating beef from your diet.

        My wife and I both drive electric vehicles and we installed solar panels on our house. Our CO2 emissions are probably half what they were three yea

    • "Current patterns of consumption, production and inequality are not sustainable....[Solutions] include changes in lifestyle, consumption preferences and consumer behaviour on the one hand, and cleaner production processes, resource efficiency and decoupling, corporate responsibility and compliance on the other hand. ...Efforts to combat biodiversity loss must also address poverty eradication, food security challenges, gender inequality, systemic inefficiencies and corruption in governance structures and other social variables.

      Never going to happen. It's like the Vatican's solution to combatting aids, abstaining from sex, which no one of course did.

      Giving out condoms, which meant that behavior was changed only slightly, and everyone could keep on ?ucking, did make a big difference to the spread of aids.

      So basically unless someone invents something to cool the planet down without affecting our lifestyles, we are doomed.

    • Gender inequality causes climate change?

      I knew it!

    • I wonder how gender inequality affects climate change. Seriously.
      • You could read the report.
        • The report [unep.org] does not contain the word gender. The summary does. Makes me think that - like most things from the UN - the report says the opposite of the summary, and the summary is the political statement that is spread through the media (for example, did you realize the IPCC reports actually state that climate is too chaotic to accurately model - but the well-publicized summaries state otherwise?). Gender inequality is in the summary - it's not in the report. How did it get into the summary?
  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Saturday March 16, 2019 @01:12PM (#58284376)
    That renewables are not going to save us. And that we need to switch to nuclear ASAP in order to save the planet? How much longer are they going to oppose nuclear power, insisting that the only way to fix things is with renewables? Because their opposition is really the only thing stopping us from solving the CO2-induced global warming problem once and for all. None of the climate change skeptics have a problem with nuclear power (well, maybe the coal and oil industries do). It's only the environmentalists preventing us from solving global warming.

    Nuclear power doesn't have to be the endgame. After we've replaced fossil fuels with nuclear power, we can still work on developing renewables (and battery tech). And as they become more capable, we can shut down nuclear plants and replace them with renewables. But what's important here and now is to get us off of fossil fuels ASAP. And right now that means replacing all our base load fossil fuel plants with nuclear plants.
  • We are already past the runaway global warning all life dies threshold. The only hope for survival of any life to survive is for the creation of a nuclear winter, and even that may not work.

    So PARTY HARDY while you can.

  • When do we get forests on Antarctica again? The fossilized record reflects a long wait between forested periods on Antarctica.

  • by Daralantan ( 5305713 ) on Saturday March 16, 2019 @02:43PM (#58284794)
    Mr. Anderson.
  • This is getting almost as ludicrous as "ancient astronaut theorists say yes".
  • This is the equivalent of those sob-story TV ads showing some kid in a third-world country who will DIE unless you send money NOW. Hint: the money doesn't get to the kid and the kid's gonna die anyway.
    By the same token, since temperature rise is inevitable, then you don't need my money.

  • Scientists fear Arctic heating could trigger a climate "tipping point" as melting permafrost releases the powerful greenhouse gas methane into the atmosphere, which in turn could create a runaway warming effect.

    Melting poles also means changing albedo [wikipedia.org]: sea is darken than ice, and hence it traps more heat from the sun.

    • That's model is too simple. Weather & climate is more like a web than a linear chain because when one thing changes it affects many other variables.

      Ice loss does mean warmer water, but as the temperature increases so does the evaporation rate. More evaporation means more water vapor in the air which means more cloud cover, which increases the albedo, and if that increases enough it could even cause the water temperature to drop and even start to freeze again.

       

  • I'm gonna make a raft out of climate change deniers

  • Artctic is a hot spot of global warming.

    PS. I am doing a data research/selflearning on NOAA data on precipitation now.

  • One man's inevitable calamity is another man's droolworthy challenge.

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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