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9780547540405

The Hot Topic: What We Can Do About Global Warming

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780547540405

  • ISBN10:

    054754040X

  • Copyright: 2008-04-07
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin

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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

Last year, awareness about global warming reached a tipping point. Now one of the most dynamic writers and one of the most respected scientists in the field of climate change offer the first concise guide to both the problems and the solutions. Guiding us past a blizzard of information and misinformation, Gabrielle Walker and Sir David King explain the science of warming, the most cutting-edge technological solutions from small to large, and the national and international politics that will affect our efforts. While there have been many other books about the problem of global warming, none has addressed what we can and should do about it so clearly and persuasively, with no spin, no agenda, and no exaggeration. Neither Walker nor King is an activist or politician, and theirs is not a generic green call to arms. Instead they propose specific ideas to fix a very specific problem. Most important, they offer hope: This is a serious issue, perhaps the most serious that humanity has ever faced. But we can still do something about it. And they’ll show us how.

Table of Contents

Prefacep. ix
The Problem
Warming Worldp. 3
Whodunnit?p. 19
Feeling the Heatp. 32
In the Pipelinep. 47
Climate Wild Cardsp. 64
Technological Solutions
What Should We Aim For?p. 81
More from Lessp. 97
Planes, Trains, and Automobilesp. 110
Power to Changep. 126
Political Solutions
It's the Economy, Stupidp. 147
The Road from Kyotop. 166
Rapidly Developing Nations (or, come on in, the agreement's lovely)p. 178
Industrialized Nations (or, whose fault is it anyway?)p. 188
How You Can Change the Worldp. 214
Acknowledgmentsp. 229
Appendix: Climate Myths, Half-Truths, and Misconceptionsp. 231
Selected Glossaryp. 241
Notesp. 245
Indexp. 267
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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Excerpts

WARMING WORLD

Climate change isn’t new. Our planet is restless and its environment rarely stays still for long. There have been times in the distant past when carbon dioxide levels were much higher than they are today and Antarctica was a tropical paradise. There have been others when carbon dioxide levels were much lower and even the equator was encrusted with ice.

 

        But over the past ten thousand years, the time during which human civilization has existed, Earth’s climate has been unusually steady. We humans have become used to a world where the way things are is more or less the way they will be, at least when it comes to temperature. In other words, we have been lucky.

 

        Now our steady reliable climate is changing, and this time nature isn’t to blame. But how do we know for certain that the world is warming, and how can we identify the culprit?

 

The Heat Is On

When you’re trying to determine whether the world’s temperature is rising, the biggest problem is picking out a signal from the background “noise.” Even in our relatively stable times, temperatures lurch up and down from one day to another, from season to season, from year to year and from place to place. To be sure that the underlying trend is changing, you need to take precise measurements from many different places around the world, and do so for an extremely long time.

 

        We do have a few long temperature records, thanks to certain individuals who decided to make the measurements just in case they ever proved useful. The world’s longest is the Central England Temperature Record, which is a tribute to the obsessive data-collecting habits of seventeenth-century British natural scientists. It covers a triangular region of England from London to Bristol to Lancashire and stretches back to 1659. This impressive record shows clear signs of warming, especially toward the end of the twentieth century.

 

        However, the record covers only a tiny part of the globe. Changes in England don’t necessarily reflect changes in the United States, say, or Brazil. It also doesn’t go back far enough to reveal just how unusual our recent warm temperatures really are. How do they compare, for instance, to the apparent warm period in medieval times when the Vikings settled a verdant, pleasant “Greenland” and there were vineyards in northern England? Or to the so-called Little Ice Age in the midcenturies of the last millennium, when the River Thames in London froze over completely so that frost fairs were held on its solid surface?

 

        To answer these questions, scientists have come up with ingenious ways to expand the records geographically and extend them backward in time. Some people have tried to interpret written archives that didn’t quote actual temperatures,1 but the best way is to look at records written not by humans, but by nature.

 

        Every year, the average tree grows a ring of new wood around its trunk. In a good year the ring will be thicker, in a bad year, thinner.2 Researchers drill a small core into the side of the tree, about the diameter of a wine cork, extract the wood, and then count and measure. By examining trees that are different ages, and even some trees that are long dead but have been preserved in peaty bogs, they have come up with a temperature record spanning more than a thousand years and from regions across northern Europe, Russia, and North America.

 

        For more tropical regions, corals can play a similar role since they, like trees, grow a new ring every year. And in the frozen north and south (and the snowcapped peaks of tropical mountains), ice also contains a record book of past climate. Each year’s snowfall buries the previous one. If temperatures are cold enough, the snow stays around long enough to be squeezed into ice, clearly marking out the annual layers because summer’s snow crystals are larger than winter’s, or because more dust blows in each year with the winter winds. The amount of snow that fell in a given year, and especially the changing nature of the oxygen atoms bound up in the ice,3 gives clues as to how warm it was then.

 

        Another clue comes from changing plant life, as written into the record of mud at the bottom of lakes. As temperature rises and falls, different plants flourish and each one sheds its pollen into passing currents of air. Some of this lands on the surface of a nearby lake, before slowly sinking into the mud beneath. Drill a hole in this mud, collect and analyze the pollen grains each layer contains, and you have yet another record of temperature changes over time.

 

        Researchers have now used a host of different ways like these to analyze and splice together these different measures, and all come to strikingly similar conclusions for temperatures over the last thousand years.4 The eleventh century was indeed relatively warm, corresponding to the Medieval Warm Period. (“Verdant” Greenland turned out to be more of a marketing exercise than the truth. Ice cores drilled into the heart of Greenland’s ice cap show that a substantial quantity of ice has been present on the island for hundreds of thousands of years. Any Vikings who fell for the hype must have had an unpleasant shock when they arrived.)

 

        Temperatures were also cooler in the seventeenth century, corresponding to the Little Ice Age, and again in the early nineteenth century. These warm and cool periods apparently were also fairly widespread, though they may have been less prevalent in the southern hemisphere.5

 

        However, it was only in the twentieth century that temperatures really began to take off. The warming didn’t happen regularly, but in two bursts—which turns out to be important. The first one occurred during the early years of the century and was marked enough that it made itself clearly felt. In 1939Timemagazine wrote: “Gaffers who claim that winters were harder when they were boys are quite right?.?.?.?Weather men have no doubt that the world at least for the time being is growing warmer.”6 But the following few decades brought slightly cooler temperatures, at least in the northern hemisphere, and public interest waned.

 

        The second burst of warming began in the 1970s and has been gathering pace ever since. And, crucially, the temperatures we are experiencing now are hotter than they have been for the entire last millennium. Even the Medieval Warm Period was cooler than it is today.7

 

        Let’s look at some numbers. Globally averaged, from the 1910s to the 1940s temperatures rose by about 0.6°F. After that there was a cooling of about 0.2°F, and since 1970 the world has warmed by a further 1°F.8 These numbers might not sound like much, but they are very significant. Although the temperature where you live can change by much more than this within the space of a few hours or days, it is much more worrying when global annual averages show an inexorable upward trend. Averaging in this way smooths out short-term flurries and shows what’s really happening. That’s why a small change in global average temperature can reflect a very big shift in climate. Speaking in global averages, only a few degrees separate us from the frigid world of the last ice age.9

 

        Though the proxy records of tree rings, ice cores, and the like give a good indication of average temperatures over a time­scale of decades, they’re not as accurate on temperatures for individual years. Thus, although we can say that the temperature is now greater than it has been in the past thousand years, it’s harder to say how 2005 compared with, say, 1105. For that sort of pinpoint accuracy only a human record will do.

 

        Good widespread records started to become available by about 1850, so we can put the past few individual years into the perspective of the past 160 or so. Once again, the message is stark. The hottest years in the entire instrumental record were in 1998 and 2005. They were very close in temperature, and opinion is divided as to which one takes the warming crown. The years 2002, 2003, and 2004 were, respectively, the third, fourth, and fifth warmest on record. In fact, eleven of the past twelve years have been in the top twelve on record.10

 

        (Much fuss was made of the recent news that an adjustment to NASA’s records meant that one of the years of the Oklahoma Dust Bowl, 1934, was marginally warmer in the United States than 1998. While skeptics claimed that this threw the global warming research into disarray, in fact it did no such thing. These two years were long known to be within a few hundredths of a degree of each other in the record of local American temperatures. But averaged over the whole world, 1998 and 2005 remain the joint record holders. Regional records can be interesting, but they don’t tell the global story.)

 

        The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is an international body made up of leading climate scientists and government advisers from around the world. In 2007 it was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its work on identifying the causes of global warming. Because its reports must reflect the consensus view of all its many contributors, the IPCC has a reputation for being conservative. It is also widely considered to be the definitive authority on the science of climate change.

 

        The latest report from the IPCC, published in 2007, describes the warming of the past few decades as “unequivocal.”11 There is no longer any room for doubt. The world is certainly heating up. What we need to know next is why.

 

Copyright © by Gabrielle Walker and Sir David King 2008

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

 

Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be submitted online at www.harcourt.com/contact or mailed to the following address: Permissions Department, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

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