The Betrayal Of The Future
by Dr Andrew Glikson
A species which has invented combustion, electromagnetic
radiation and nuclear energy orders of magnitude more powerful than its own
physical potential, needs to be perfectly wise and in control lest it is
overwhelmed by these powers.
As tipping points in the Earth’s climate amplify, including
hurricanes, snow storms and wildfires, it appears to be beyond human power to
contemplate the consequences of four degrees Celsius warming within less than a
couple of centuries, a collapse of civilization and the demise of billions. The
consequents of global warming have been underestimated as many cannot bring
themselves to look at the unthinkable.
This reticence has penetrated the scientific disciplines
themselves, as indicated by James Hansen, the prominent climate scientist, in
his papers “Scientific Reticence: A Threat to Humanity”, “Dangerous Scientific
Reticence”. Hansen states: “Several years ago I wrote a paper (Hansen, J.E.,
2007) on scientific reticence, naively thinking that drawing attention to the
phenomenon might ameliorate its incidence.
Specific reference then was to likelihood of large sea level rise, which
also is a central topic in our current paper (Ice melt, sea level rise and
superstorms: Evidence from paleoclimate data, climate modeling, and modern
observations that 2°C global warming could be dangerous). However, here I address a broader issue of
scientific reticence, because, I believe, the affliction is widespread and
severe. Unless recognized, it may
severely diminish our chances of averting dangerous climate change.”
The IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), while
documenting the best scientific evidence by competent scientific authorities,
has underestimates the consequences of global warming in its summaries for
policy makers, in terms of:
Greenland and
Antarctic ice sheets melting rates
Sea level rise
rates
Linear vs
increasingly variable projections of temperature rise.
The fast rising
incidence of fires
Arctic
warming-triggered permafrost melt and methane release.
Publication of climate updates in the mainstream media has
become subject to barriers. Climate exhaustion has set-in, with journals
commonly reluctant to accept science-based articles, often on the pretext they
are “too complicated”, although publishing economic modelling papers and
computer technology papers which are just as complex or more.
Most poignant is the reluctance of the political classes to
listen to the science, an attitude that is bound to be considered criminal and
worse by those who survive the climate calamity.
In his book “Defiant Earth” Clive Hamilton states: “Many
intellectuals in the social sciences and humanities do not concede that Earth
scientists have anything to say that could impinge on their understanding of
the world, because the “world” consists only of humans engaging with humans,
with nature no more than a passive backdrop to draw on as we please. The
“humans-only” orientation of the social sciences and humanities is reinforced
by our total absorption in representations of reality derived from media,
encouraging us to view the ecological crisis as a spectacle that takes place
outside the bubble of our existence” and “So today the greatest tragedy is the
absence of a sense of the tragedy. The indifference of most to the Earth
system’s disturbance may be attributed to a failure of reason or psychological
weaknesses; but these seem inadequate to explain why we find ourselves on the
edge of the abyss” and “Yet the Earth scientists continue to haunt us,
following us around like wailing apparitions while we hurry on with our lives,
turning around occasionally with irritation to hold up the crucifix of
Progress.
In his book “First and Last Man” Olaf Stapledon describes a
planetary civilization which, once aware of the ultimate fate of its planet,
plunges into depression, distinct from the oblivious mindset of a majority of
contemporary humans.
With this perspective, the failure of humanity to cope
effectively with the unfolding climate calamity constitutes its Achilles heel.
Further than attributing this failure to mercenary contrarians and to
conviction-free politicians, this failure resides with the majority, bar the
few courageous individuals who protest in front of mine gates and in small
boats on the ocean. It is these people, rather than the comfortable elites, who
are carrying the torch of humanity.
Dr Andrew Glikson, Earth and Paleo-climate science, ANU
School of Anthropology and Archaeology, ANU Climate Change Institute,
Andrew.Glikson@anu.edu.au; geospec@iinet.net.au
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