BBC on Global Dimming 470
linoleo writes "The BBC reports that the amount of solar energy reaching the Earth's surface has declined significantly between the 1950s and the 1990s, apparently due to particulate air pollution. Scientists are worried that this global dimming may be disrupting the pattern of the world's rainfall. Most alarmingly, it may have led us to greatly underestimate the greenhouse effect: with particulate pollution being brought under control, a global temperature rise of 10 degrees Celsius by 2100 could be on the cards, rendering many parts of the world uninhabitable." The lengthy transcript of the show is available.
less is more (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:less is more (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:less is more (Score:2)
they fear its getting less rainfall too...
Re:less is more (Score:5, Informative)
They say we are getting less sunlight thanks the visible pollution in the atmosphere which encourages cloud formation in a fashion which reflects more sunlight than clouds formed around natural pollutants such as pollen.
We are making big steps to clean up the visible pollution and therefore bringing the amount of sunlight back to normal levels.
However given that the world is still warming up despite the cooling effect of this reduction of sunlight they are supposing this must mean that global warming is in fact a lot more powerful than they first thought since we can still detect noticable warming despite a reduction in sunlight.
As we clean up more and more of our visible pollution without cleaning up our CO2 pollution we may face a much bigger temperature increase than we were expecting.
The program was fairly sensastionalist and towards the end went through some highly speculative "we are all going to die" scenarios. I would have liked them to concetrate more on the evidence they have for global dimming and maybe some contrary evidence or any doubts the scientific community may have about the results of the scientists they did show.
Re:less is more (Score:3, Interesting)
You may now run some atmospheric modelling code to work out what the hell this will do to the climate.
An immediate conclusion made in the article is that this effect is masking the current rate of climate change due to CO2, so that as we clean up the atmosphere due to reduced particulate emissions, the greenhouse effect will get worse, even i
Re:less is more (Score:2)
According to this model, the percentage of sunlight that actually reaches the surface is getting smaller, while the increasing rest is heating the atmosphere (due to heat buildup on dust particles). That's why the model predicts an increase in temperature.
Re:less is more (Score:2)
Good for the UK! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Oh you poor deluded soul.
pay the extra and go somewhere with a lower population density at a closer-to-the-equator kinda latitide. jeez.
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
I know you probably don't know where North Dakota is, but just look at map of the US, find the middle of the country, and then just go up to the top. A little bit to the left of those big fresh water lakes we have.
That area of the planet (Minnesota/North Dakota/South Dakota) actually has the second most variable temperatures in the whole world, behind Sibera.
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Ha ha ha..... bwa ha ha ha! (Falls off chair laughing)
This has *got* to be a joke. I've lived in Scotland all of my life, and I still think the weather from October to April or so sucks.
And temperature isn't everything; even though the coldest days in winter tend to be those with clear blue skies (no insulation), there is also no rain at those times, no permeating d
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2, Funny)
... but what will happen to the indigenous people of the British Isles? I heard they combust if exposed to sunlight for more than 4 hours.
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Most of them they moved to Wales and Scotland when the French invaded to avoid being slaugtered.
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
The Scots (originally Irish, but by now Scotch) were at this time inhabiting Ireland, having driven the Irish (Picts) out of Scotland; while the Picts (originally Scots) were now Irish...
Re:Good for the UK! (Score:2)
North Africa however would suffer a 10 degree increase in temperature and become totally unihabitable.
So as long as... (Score:4, Insightful)
Really, this article jumps to far too many conclusions with far too little data.
And with exactly the same certainty as this statement expresses, if I dance around in a circle every Thursday night, an average rainfall increase of 17 inches could be in the cards!
Re:So as long as... (Score:2)
Plenty of data was presented to support the primary conclusions in the program. In particular decades worth of solid measurements demonstrating the drop in insolation, and satellite data showing pretty convincingly that this drop is due to increased reflection of sunlight.
The program was pointing out that this "global dimming" is a demonstrably real effect and needs to be studi
Fear Fear Fear (Score:5, Informative)
One brings into question the level of accuracy from third world countries in the early 1900's. When one looks at the average temperature in America it tells a different story. From 1880 to 1920 temperatures dropped 0.5 degrees celsius. From 1920 to 1934 temperatures rose 0.9 degree celsius. From 1934 to 1976 temperatures dropped 0.8 degrees celsius. From 1976 to present temperatures have risen 0.7 degrees celsius, for a net total of 0.3 degrees celsius in 124 years.
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:2)
Well, now perhaps we have an explanation for all this. During the cooling years, there could have been in increase in particulate pollution (e.g. 1880-1920, burning of more coal; 1934-1976 increased industrialisation)
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:2)
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:2)
Since the 1930's there has been NO increase in temperature in America. None. In fact, it was hotter in the 1930's than it is now, though very slightly.
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:2)
http://www.giss.nasa.gov/data/update/gistemp/gr
There's temperature in America since 1880.
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:2)
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0318/csmimg/p17a.
Those are temps in antartica for the past tons of years. As you can see, Our current phase is actually *less* hot than it "should" be if the trend were to continue the way it has been. And the temperature Goes up and down between 10 degrees celsius and people didn't perish
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:2)
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:3, Insightful)
Global temperature has risen, fallen, and risen since 1880, even though carbon dioxide levels have steadily risen.
There's no doubt that CO2 levels have risen. There's also no doubt that they're far above what they've ever been over thousands of years (ice core data).
Who cares what the temperature data says? We know we can't arbitrarily raise the CO2 levels in the atmosphere ad infinitum. Putting off reducing CO2 emissions is just procrastination (and dangerous, for economic reasons, but ignoring that...
Re:Fear Fear Fear (Score:3, Funny)
"Global warmimg is a theory, not a fact."
Instead of having people believe its all a fear monger game.
we can all confirm (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:we can all confirm (Score:2)
Who am I channeling?
Earlier /. Global Dimming articles (Score:4, Informative)
Global Dimming [slashdot.org] Dec 18
Hint to editors: I obtained the links by doing a Slashdot search for dimming [slashdot.org]. Also checked that a Google site:slashdot.org search [google.com] also turned up results.
Environmentalist Claims Sky Is Falling! (Score:2, Funny)
Seriously folks, non-doomsday research doesn't get as much funding as doomsday research.
WooHoo! (Score:3, Funny)
all those people will be flocking to the tropical shores of wonderful Lake erie!
Output Increasing (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.space.com/scienceastronom
http://www.hypography.com/article.cfm?id=32945
safest place on earth? (Score:2)
No serious, I live somewhere in western europe near the cost. But since I am only in my early 20's, I can still move somewhere else.
So where would you move to, or how high above or below sea level would you move?
All these fear mongering stories are nice and scary, but damit, provide them with a map with the affected areas.
Re:safest place on earth? (Score:2)
Re:safest place on earth? (Score:2)
Always so negative (Score:3, Funny)
Particulates vs greenhouse gases (Score:2)
The article wanders a bit: it starts by talking about the dramatic increase in particulate matter in the atmosphere, i.e. very small bits of carbon and ash given off as a result of combustion.
But then the article ends with this:
That means a temperature rise of 10 degrees Celsius by 2100 could be on the cards, giving the UK a climate like that of North Africa, and rendering many parts of the world uninhabitable.
That is unless we act urgently to curb our emissions of greenhouse gases.
That's a goo
Re:Particulates vs greenhouse gases (Score:2)
Re:Particulates vs greenhouse gases (Score:3, Informative)
We have global dimming, caused by particulate pollution, the world is getting less light than it used to.
Despite this, we have global warming, caused by greenhouse gases, the world is getting hotter.
Therefore, if we clean up the particulate pollution without tackling the greenhouse gas problem, then the global warming could become more pronounced because of the increased sunlight reaching us.
I didn't RTFA but I did WTFP (Watch the program).
If you live in the midwest... (Score:2)
many factors make it a puzzle (Score:2)
Kent Brockman reporting (Score:4, Funny)
Professor: Mmm, yes I would, Kent.
http://www.snpp.com/episodes/1F09.html
Semi-repost. (Score:2)
I for one (Score:2)
It's frickin cold up here in Canada during winter.
A few more degrees, and the Champlain Sea might be reborn, and give me a nice beachfront property on the edge of the soon to be renamed "Ottawa Valley".
Re:I for one (Score:2)
Re:I for one (Score:2)
Not supported by the evidence. If nature were so amazingly balanced, the planet would be a wasteland by now. Too many natural changes have occured in the past that would have wiped out all life on the planet.
The conclusion warranted by the actual evidence is that the biosphere is extremely robust and adaptive.
burn some tires !!! (Score:2)
this sounds like a bad cartoon
Fallen Angels (Score:2)
Incidently, that link goes directly to the first chapter - it is one of Baen's first experiments wi
photographic memory (Score:4, Interesting)
I know it probably seems ludicrous to most people. I don't talk about things like that normally, because people just dismiss you as nuts, but it's real to me. I am curious, are there any others out there with long term photo memories that exhibit the same thing as I see?
Thermodynamics (Score:2)
descriptive nouns (Score:3, Informative)
Solution: More Pollution Needed! (Score:2)
So... so... the environmentally concerned scientists are saying...
WE NEED MORE POLLUTION?!
My head hurts.
Let me get this straight... (Score:2)
global warming? No, global climate change.... (Score:5, Interesting)
#1 - Global climate change means exactly that - it will get warmer in some places, colder in others. And while idyllic thoughts of long summers around Great Bear Lake might spark a real estate boom, there will be a few downsides to the change. Disease vectors love warm weather, which means that pesky malaria (so, caused by bad air after all!) will become a feature of northern summers.
#2 - The problem of increased warming due to pollution reduction is well known. These are relatively large particles being talked about, the ones that reflect sunlight back out (like after a volcano) - this does not include the smaller particles that have a much larger "green house" effect. Thus as we reduce large particulate pollution, the speed of warming will indeed increase.
#3 - The "wait and study it so we know what is happending" arguement. This arguement has many supporters, including those who love discount rates. The fact is, once a glacier begins to melt (ahem, Greenland), there will be no way to stop it. Mind you, it might take a few hundred to a few thousand years... so maybe 2k'ers get the last laugh?
get the sun screen, helga (Score:2)
and other parts prime for days at the beach! My property values in NJ are going to go up!!!
larger drops in solar output seem questionable (Score:4, Insightful)
IMHO even over 50 years, we should be able to spot trends of that order of magnitude in our food crops.
Re:larger drops in solar output seem questionable (Score:3, Informative)
From "concerned" to "worried" (Score:3, Insightful)
This article is probably the one that will turn people from "concerned" to "worried." We are talking about making the planet uninhabitable. On any continent. It's amazing that people are talking about this as "pop science garbage." How comforting it is to take such a position, because otherwise you'd actually have to be worried about this issue.
NEWS FLASH (Score:4, Funny)
BBC EXCLUSIVE: Scientists have acquired evidence that the Earth will be absorbed by the Sun in approximately 7.7 billion years.
"No one will survive this catastrophe," claims experts. "All life on planet Earth will be extinguished. If we don't take action now, this atrocity will claim every living man, woman and child on this planet."
Environmentalists are asking for trillions of dollars for research grants and book advances with which to shriek about the coming apocalypse.
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:2)
But seriously.
How many of these stories does Michael have to post? Every single one that appears from every single source?
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:2)
They're running a website, and they need to keep the posts coming. Otherwise, we morans will go someplace else with our flame-wars, and they have to get real jobs.
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:2)
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:5, Informative)
Excuse me, he's suggesting that both are causing a massive affect, the most noticeable part of both canceling each other out. Let's say we have an egg on a roof. We push it one way, it falls off. We push it the other way, it falls off. He's saying we're pushing it both ways. It's not going to fall off right now because it's balances but if we drop the force on one side, it'll fall off. Incidentally, not suggested by him but by me: It can crack where it stands.
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:5, Insightful)
Replace the common useage of' 'Global warming' as 'greenhouse effect', and then park GW for the time being. If you don't understand this, consider that a car with windows rolled up acts a like a greenhouse. Sit in the shade and you might get a little uncomfortable, but not seriously so. Move out of the shade and... toast. In both cases there was complete Car Warming, but you can easily see the two major and independent factors. The make of the car does *not* matter...
So, greenhouse effects and shading are as different as
1 - Our models are wrong. Shading deducts X amount of energy which means that our estimate for the strength of greenhouse-effect is probably off by X.
2 - Ironically, shading helps, in the sense that we get less total increase in temperature - but it isn't all good, and it isn't that simple. Most importantly, reducing shading by without reducing the greenhouse effect would is tantamount to raising the temperature - which is a big no-no.
Incidentally, the particles are doing exactly what you suggest, but the implication is not what you understand it to be. One of many observations was that during flight-less days post 9/11, it didn't just get "warmer", energy flow & flux (both ways!) increased. Warmer days, cooler nights.
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:3, Insightful)
Finally, of course there's more to the story than j
Aren't the particulates getting heated? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:5, Insightful)
Secondly, I don't think the journalist came up with that conclusion. Scientists did, and the journalist is just reporting it, which incidentally is his job.
The media can be irresponsible at times, and does make mistakes. But reporting the findings of scientists, like this, is not one of them, even if the conclusions they have reached do not agree with yours. After all, if they didn't report it, and thus did not feed the "pop-sci crap" to the public, others would feel they're not doing their job. So relax.
Reminds me... (Score:2)
Newsweek: The Cooling World - April 28, 1975 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:consensus that there really is a problem (Score:3, Interesting)
The programme claimed that the worst case scenario - melting of the methane clathrates - would be an uncontrollable massive acceleration in the greenhouse effect, leading to temperatures not seen on Earth for billions of years. That is geological time changes, compressed into 100 years or less.
That's not certain to happen, but I think we should be very concerned about that possibility, if it is a possibility, however small the probability.
Umm.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I saw the actual programme, and it was far from Pop Science. In paticular the 9/11 data was fairly stark in underlining the impact of removal of aeroplanes from the skys for just two days over the US.
But of course, we could all just bury our heads in the sand and claim it is pop science.
The programme went into a "light" amount of detail, but mainly said this was something that required more research but was on the scary side of its implications. They certainly didn't say it was cancelling out the greenhouse effect, they claimed it was MASKING its impact, a very different claim.
The real trouble is that anything that claims there is a global warming problem caused by pollution comes up against one basic problem:
The US Energy Policy.
To my mind these elements equate to the old "the odds of this thing going critical if I drop it are pretty low" school of porting nuclear materials. The odds may be low, but the cost is huge, hence the reason you don't just lob the stuff about.
So it was a lightweight programme, well yes it wasn't the Open University, but "Pop Science", not really. It definately played for some dramatic effect, but there was evidence for those who were watching.
Re:Umm.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Any other posts you'd like to make so people can come back and make you sound stupid?
Re:Umm.... (Score:3, Insightful)
And this I would guess is an excuse for the US not to do anything
"Sure we might be bad, but in 20 years time we might only be the second worse"
I predict that given that China has no direct oil of its own to meet demand that it will focus on other technology elements to reduce its reliance on external countries, and also as a stimulator to technology driven growth. The fact is we don't know, but the one fact we do know is that here and now the US is the worlds worst polluter on every scale, per capita or
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Pop Sci Garbage (Score:2)
The sky is falling (Score:3, Funny)
Bad reporting on a real story, though (Score:3, Informative)
It's true that popular media accounts of the holocaust tend to include some apocryphal material -- the soap story, the lampshades, sometimes lumping all the camps together as if they were run the same way. It's also true that the weight of the evidence has convinced every credible historian on the planet of the fact that the holocau
PARENT OVERRATED, MOD DOWN ( "Pop Sci Garbage" ) (Score:4, Informative)
Global warming is a train-wreck towards which we're all headed, and I guess Big Bro' wants to downplay it to avoid panic.
YOU CAN (AND SHOULD) READ THE ARTICLE YOURSELF AT http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon
Mad poster wrote: "I like when news outlets use this type of language. 'Woke up'."
The article does not try to imply scientists are closed-minded or doddards. The portion of the article "mad poster" is referring to is simply pointing out that light-meter measurements indicating the Global Dimming pattern did not receive much attention until they had been corroborated by a completely different method of measurement: water evaporation rates.
Global Dimming required corroboration by multiple methods of measurement because it was very surprising, very surprising for two reasons: (1) the effect was so large that scientists found it hard to believe nobody had mentioned it before (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence), and (2) it seems to contradict Global Warming.
These two kinds of measurements, light-meter, and water evaporation rates, have been made at least back to the 1950's, and both indicate that the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth's surface has declined by 10 to 30 percent, depending on location, from the 1950s to the early 1990s.
Mad poster wrote: "To suggest that little or no climate changed is being 'caused' by something man made without backing it up goes beyond the bounds of irresponsible journalism
I'm not even sure what the first sentence means. The article didn't give evidence why humans aren't causing climate change? What? He was in a hurry to be one of the first posts, I suppose -- before a TRULY informative post was submitted, which would make it harder for the slashdot disinformtion network to manipulate the modding process.
The article actually presents the following evidence that Global Dimming has been caused by pollution particles in the air:
Project INDOEX found a 10 percent reduction in sunlight reaching the Earth's surface due to pollution particles in the air. This was attributed to pollution particles making clouds more reflective. Clouds are formed by water vapor condensing on the surface of airborne particles. The presence of air pollutant particles causes these droplets to be smaller and so more reflective. The droplets are smaller because there are ten times as many particles for droplets to form about. Why smaller droplets are more reflective the article does not say.
Re:So.... (Score:2)
What odds would you want before taking action?
Re:So.... (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not a question of odds. How do you determine odds on something you don't understand?
Re:So.... (Score:2)
Re:So.... (Score:2)
I live in the centre of the city. granted not everyone can do this, but I'm doing this because it's the best thihng for me.
I don't want a car, and I need one rarely. I'm taking public transport or riding my mountain bike to work. Sure, I'm either "sitting with the proles" or taking my own life into my hands (as if it was anyone else's!), but I'm not riding a car on my own, something which thoroughly pisses me off.
I'm of the opinion that if you live more than 15km from work in a city/majo
Re:Oilcrisis (Score:2)
Re:Glad I live in CANADA (Score:2)
Like Tampa?
Re:Doomed (Score:2)
Re:Uninhabitable? BS! (Score:2)
Certainly it is possible for us to survive in places like Antartica, Siberia, Alaska and the Moon but this is only possible thanks to the infrastructure behind such settlements. That infrastructure depends on us having comfortable areas where we can grow food, manufacture equipment and live without dedicating every waking minute to day to day survival.
E
Re:Uninhabitable? BS! (Score:2)
Places like Bangladesh are home to millions and millions of people, unless they evolve gills and learn to live under water they will need to
Re:Drive that SUV into the ground (Score:2)
Re:It's Articles Like This (Score:2)
Re:Pollution Versus Global Warming (Score:2)