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Earth Science

Planet At Risk of Heading Towards Irreversible 'Hothouse Earth' State (vice.com) 1159

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: What we do in the next 10-20 years will determine whether our planet remains hospitable to human life or slides down an irreversible path to what scientists in a major new study call "Hothouse Earth" conditions. Hothouse Earth is an apocalyptic nightmare where the global average temperatures is 4 to 5 degrees Celsius higher (with regions like the Arctic averaging 10 degrees C higher) than today, according to the study, "Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene," published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Sea levels would eventually be 10-60 meters higher as much of the world's ice melts. In these conditions, large parts of the Earth would be uninhabitable. Cutting carbon emissions to limit climate change to 2 degrees C, as proposed in the Paris climate agreement, won't be enough to avoid a "Hothouse Earth," said co-author Johan Rockstrom, executive director of Stockholm Resilience Centre. The reality is that global temperatures aren't driven by human emissions of carbon alone, says Rockstrom -- natural systems such as forests and oceans also play a major role. If global warming reaches 2 degrees C it could trigger a feedback, or "tipping element," in one or more of our natural systems and drive further warming, Rockstrom told Motherboard. To put that into perspective, the recent heat waves and wildfires are being linked to climate change that has raised the global average temperature 1 degree C. The researchers conclude the study on a more uplifting note, saying: "We have the knowledge and ability to act. This is within our control." There are three main areas of action that need to be taken within the next two decades. "The top priority in the coming decade is to aggressively cut carbon emissions and decarbonize our energy systems as quickly as possible," reports Motherboard. "The second priority is to halt deforestation and conversion of nature areas into agricultural production. Forests and other natural areas currently absorb 25 percent of our carbon emissions and this needs to grow." The third action is "to continue to develop technologies to pull carbon from the atmosphere and safely store it for thousands of years." While this last action can be costly, we're starting to see some companies give it a try. A startup called Climeworks recently inaugurated the first system that captures CO2 from the air and converts the emissions into stone, thus ensuring they don't escape back into the atmosphere for the next millions of years.
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Planet At Risk of Heading Towards Irreversible 'Hothouse Earth' State

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  • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @11:35PM (#57082756) Journal
    US emissions are down [reason.com] whilst EU - and China, and India - emissions are up. I'm sure this will get down-modded since it doesn't pay homage to the proper models, but facts are facts: and when facts and beliefs/models collide - facts win.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      The direction doesn't matter much, for the USA is still a bigger "carbon pig" per capita than those countries. The fact your linked article failed to disclose that makes me reluctant to trust their objectivity, being it's a key metric when comparing countries.

      • by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @12:00AM (#57082852)

        The direction doesn't matter much, for the USA is still a bigger "carbon pig" per capita than those countries

        That's because a lot of those countries simply export their carbon emissions; that is, they switch to domestic industries like service industries that are low carbon and simply move production of carbon intensive goods to other countries. The US is so large and diverse that that's not an option.

        In any case, in terms of energy intensity, the US is comparable to Sweden, Belgium, and Australia and about world average; in terms of carbon intensity, the US is far below world average. Calling the US a "carbon pig" given those facts makes little sense.

        • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @04:59AM (#57083722) Journal
          It's not just the intensity but also how that energy is generated. Norway is comparable to the USA, however hydro makes up for 105% of their energy needs (they export some of it). USA is still rather heavy on coal, whereas many European countries have already made the switch to gas. Look at the CO2 emissions per capita, the USA is way up there, with almost twice the emissions of Belgium and much of the rest of western Europe, and 4 times Sweden's...
      • The direction doesn't matter much, for the USA is still a bigger "carbon pig" per capita than those countries.

        Per capita doesn't matter to the planet or atmospheric physics. Total carbon emission does.

        The only people who care about per capita emissions above total emissions are those attempting some sort of social engineering.

      • by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @08:32AM (#57084442) Journal

        So it needs to be 100% or nothing? Incremental progress isn't good enough, so why bother at all?

        You are part of the problem here.

    • by beckett ( 27524 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @11:55PM (#57082822) Homepage Journal

      US emissions are down

      US externalities are way up

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Kohath ( 38547 )

      facts win.

      Unless the mods can hide them before anyone finds out.

    • by kiviQr ( 3443687 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @12:39AM (#57082970)
      US outsources not only production but also polution.
    • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @12:46AM (#57082992)

      The US drop in emissions is a one-time bonus from replacement of coal by natural gas. It's a good start, but just a start.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
        i.e. rplacing fossil fools with fossil farts. What the US should be doing is building nuclear power plants and electrifying roads ("Supercharger" stations every few miles) and railroads. Get rid of fossil fool use for transport.
        • What the US should be doing is building nuclear power plants

          Won't happen. Politically it's just a non-starter for a variety of well understood reasons. People are scared of nuclear power regardless of whether or not they should be. I think you'll only see heavy use of nuclear fission in places where political dissent can be suppressed (like China) or where it is use of nuclear fission is already dominant (like France).

          Get rid of fossil fool use for transport.

          I think this will happen fairly naturally actually though perhaps not fast enough. I just bought a Chevy Bolt recently and it seems obvious to me

      • That is what literally every person on the leftist side says in attempt to justify any of their non-justifiable proposals. Ban gasoline cars. It wont solve the problem, but it's a start. Ban straws. It wont solve the problem, but it's a start. Ban AR-15's. It wont solve the problem, but it's a start . Tax the rich. It wont solve the problem, but it's a start. Subsidize semi nationalized healthcare. It wont solve the problem, but it's a start. The bottom line is it's all BS, and in each case, it ISN'T even
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      From your own link:

      the Environmental Protection Agency reports that the U.S. reduced its carbon dioxide emissions by 2 percent in 2016.

      You may want to consider it's not 2016 now, with a different policy approach to the climate.

    • by Askmum ( 1038780 )
      I'm not going to downmod this. In the Netherlands the government seems to be intent on stopping the general public from deploying solar energy by changing the feed-in rules and not wanting to tell how they are going to change it. Solar should have been on every roof by now. Germany was a good example, but the krauts also burn way to much lignite.
    • The US has a massive source of geothermal energy to pump into the grid, yellowstone national park. Good luck getting the environmentalists who want to save the earth to go along with exploiting it. Or the existing power companies to not throw a fit if free federally funded power from federal lands slashes their profits. What am I thinking? Knowing our country taxes would be raised on the middle class to offset the cost and the power companies would get to keep the savings as additional profits.
    • Not true (Score:4, Informative)

      by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @04:21AM (#57083600) Journal
      EU has gone down over the last 20 years. They have plateaued recently, but they are not growing.
      • Re: Not true (Score:3, Informative)

        EU and China are both still at least less than half the CO2 as America.
        • That's completely false. China alone generates almost twice what we do https://www.ucsusa.org/global-... [ucsusa.org]

          Now per capita they generate much less which is pretty scary given the rate they're developing at and the number of people they have.

    • by CaffeinatedBacon ( 5363221 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @05:07AM (#57083752)

      US emissions are down. But they are 'down' to twice the level of China and even higher still than the EU.

      Follow the lead of America if you don't give 2 shits about what happens to the planet.

    • While it is true that EU emission rose and US emission are slightly more down, per capita the US emission per capita ~16t are slightly more than double the one per capita in EU ~7t (2014 numbers sorry, difficult to come back to all country 2017/2018 nubmers https://data.worldbank.org/ind... [worldbank.org]). That is the ONE measure which is far more telling than absolute change from years to years. 2% up to 7t*500 million is still vastly less than16*300 million even if that country emit slightly less CO2 due to change from
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @11:36PM (#57082760)
    you have to take care of their basic needs first. In America 80% of us [google.com] live paycheck to paycheck. When you're living hand to mouth you don't really care about 20 years from now.
    • Good point. The ass hats on top are the problem. A certain one in particular.
    • you have to take care of their basic needs first. In America 80% of us [google.com] live paycheck to paycheck. When you're living hand to mouth you don't really care about 20 years from now.

      Some of that is poverty, but most of that is personal finance. For whatever reason a lot of people can't save money, give them a raise and you'll raise their standard of living, but they'll still be living paycheck to paycheck.

      You can't wait until you've fixed every other problem on the planet until you start addressing global warming, you need to start fixing it now.

  • in which the interior is as hot as molten lava
  • by AbRASiON ( 589899 ) * on Monday August 06, 2018 @11:58PM (#57082840) Journal

    https://xkcd.com/1732/ [xkcd.com]

    Yeah, I know it's a cartoon and not precise scale but it's pretty blatant at the end of it, bad things are coming.

    Combine this, with the recent discussion of methane finally escaping in siberia.
    https://www.google.com.au/sear... [google.com.au]

    It's only a matter of time, we're well past the point of no return. I can't really fathom a good analogy, perhaps the titanic? Except 10,000 times larger and moving much, much slower but we're only 6 feet from the ice burg. We're gonna take a little bit to hit it, but rest assured we absoloutely will be hitting that ice burg.

    Don't breed, having kids in the future that's coming is only more depressing.

    • Early Eocene (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @01:51AM (#57083144) Journal

      It's only a matter of time, we're well past the point of no return.

      Really? Well someone should have told that to the planet in the early Eocene then when temperatures were +12-14C above current levels [wikipedia.org]. Somehow it reversed that trend and cooled down considerably.

      Global warming is a serious problem and we absolutely do need to combat it because if we don't it will cause massive political destabilization as food production changes, populations move, water resources change, cities flood etc. However, claiming that it's the "end of the world" because it is irreversible and will make the planet inhospitable to human life is complete crap and counterproductive because it leads to dispair rather than action.

  • Upside (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 )

    The upside is it will be so obvious that Republicans cannot deny it's happening.

    However, they'll probably blame it on Democrats somehow, maybe claiming that catering to LGBTQ made God angry, who then baked Earth as punishment. You think I'm joking, don't you? [independent.co.uk]

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by ahodgson ( 74077 )

      California is burning down. Houston and New York have both been hit by historic hurricanes in the last couple of years. Parts of Florida are already being overrun with rising oceans. Yet I still see a page of denialists right here, let alone bought and paid for Republicans. We're screwed.

  • Bigger cars and bigger houses with powerful air-conditioning on one side (which caused global warming in the first place), tropical heat on the other side of the divide.
  • The dinosaurs said the same thing about the Ice Age and they were just as wrong. Sure it wiped the dinosaurs out but the Ice Age eventually ended didn't it?!
  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @12:56AM (#57083030) Homepage Journal

    What we do in the next 10-20 years will determine whether our planet remains hospitable to human life or slides down an irreversible path

    We've had 5-10 years [newsbank.com] left to save the planet for the last 30 years [dailycaller.com] or so... The numbers may change [telegraph.co.uk], but the — unsubstantiated — message is always the same...

  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @01:36AM (#57083116)
    We already have an alternate power source to avoid this - nuclear power. But rather than use this pre-existing power technology which solves the problem, environmentalists insisted that we dismantle that existing solution, and roll the dice on hopefully developing new and untested power sources in time to avert disaster.

    Nuclear power doesn't have to be the end-game. All we need to do is to replace our fossil fuel power plants with nuclear plants to arrest CO2 emissions and buy us more time. Then we can develop renewables at our leisure, and use those to phase out nuclear power as they (and battery technology) become capable of handling our base load requirements.

    The low range of the time estimate (10 years) is coincidentally about the amount of time it takes to complete construction of a large nuclear plant. Let's see if environmentalists read this news about the coming doomsday scenario, and take it a a sign to drop opposition to nuclear power. Or if they'd rather let all life on Earth go extinct, than let renewable power temporarily take a back seat to nuclear power.
    • We already have an alternate power source to avoid this - nuclear power.

      Solves one problem but causes others. And it is a political non-starter. Fortunately solar and wind + batteries can take up most of the slack if we push them hard enough.

      But rather than use this pre-existing power technology which solves the problem

      Have you solved the nuclear waste problem? Do you have a reactor design that cannot render a large area uninhabitable in a serious failure? Have you figured out how to get the cost down to competitive levels without requiring government insurance guarantees? Have you figured out how to restore areas contaminated by the occasional but i

  • by macraig ( 621737 ) <mark@a@craig.gmail@com> on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @02:15AM (#57083224)

    I've read that a human population with all modern technologies is fully sustainable to a limit of 500 million. How far past that sustainable limit are we now, and still living in denial of this 800-pound gorilla sitting on top of the solution to nearly all the problems of human civilization?

    Good luck with that denial, people. The population reduction is coming one way or another....

  • The Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), alternatively "Eocene thermal maximum 1" (ETM1), and formerly known as the "Initial Eocene" or "Late Paleocene Thermal Maximum" was a time period with more than 8 C warmer global average temperature than today. This climate event began at the time boundary between the Paleocene and Eocene geological epochs. The exact age and duration of the event is uncertain but it is estimated to have occurred around 55.5 million years ago.

    The associated period of massi

  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @02:31AM (#57083268)

    ... the more plausible scenario. The reverse albedo effect is already taking effect and we're still adding to the carbon circle big time. Trumpistan and the wider world is still blissfully unaware of what's happening, as are the idiots here in my country dragging their heels with solar and driving ever larger luxury Audi's and Porsches and Daimlers, each and everybody on his own, at the same time.
    The current heatwave in Germany beats everything we've seen so far. It feels like I'm on the equator. Today they forecast 37ÂC, the highest temperature yet in my region and it's only going to get worse.

  • I'm beyond caring (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @02:46AM (#57083322)

    Just read the comments here and realize we have arrived at stage 3 of the 4-stages of climate disaster denial:

    1: "Oh, there is no such thing as a climate change!"
    2: "What you see there is just a variation in weather, not climate!"
    3: "Well, yes, there is a change, but it's natural, nothing human makes."
    4: "Ok, the change is real and we're fucked, but it's too late to do anything anyway."

    The great thing about any of those 4 steps is that you needn't change anything in your behaviour. The only thing that kinda bugs me is how quickly we arrived at 3, I was hoping that I'd at least be on my way out before we arrive at "we're fucked", because back in stage 1, I did actually care about the planet. In the meantime I stopped caring. What for? I am old. I have no kids. And if you can't be assed to keep this planet able to sustain life so your kids can live, why the fuck should I care?

    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      The common thread is people saying no to totalitarianism — whether we believe your stories about the future or we don't.

      The climate alarmists decided to ally with politicians and pundits and activists who have been shitting on a substantial fraction of the US population for 50 years. Guess that didn't work out.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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