Oh noes! Doomsday clock 1 minute closer to midnight thanks to global warming, other concerns

From the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, where worry about climate change gets equal time alongside their original mission; nuclear holocaust, apparently they haven’t noticed that the Fukashima incident is over and no lives were lost and that there been no statistically significant warming in the past 10+ years.

In the first press release (they have two for some reason), they have this to say:

Allison Macfarlane, chair, BAS Science and Security Board, member, Blue Ribbon Commission on American’s Nuclear Future, and associate professor, George Mason University, said: 

“The global community may be near a point of no return in efforts to prevent catastrophe from changes in Earth’s atmosphere.  The International Energy Agency projects that, unless societies begin building alternatives to carbon-emitting energy technologies over the next five years, the world is doomed to a warmer climate, harsher weather, droughts, famine, water scarcity, rising sea levels, loss of island nations, and increasing ocean acidification.  Since fossil-fuel burning power plants and infrastructure built in 2012-2020 will produce energy—and emissions—for 40 to 50 years, the actions taken in the next few years will set us on a path that will be impossible to redirect.  Even if policy leaders decide in the future to reduce reliance on carbon-emitting technologies, it will be too late.”

Here’s the other press release:

Doomsday Clock moves to five minutes to midnight

10 January 2012It is five minutes to midnight. Two years ago, it appeared that world leaders might address the truly global threats that we face. In many cases, that trend has not continued or been reversed. For that reason, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists is moving the clock hand one minute closer to midnight, back to its time in 2007.

Nuclear disarmament

Despite the promise of a new spirit of international cooperation, and reductions in tensions between the United States and Russia, the Science and Security Board believes that the path toward a world free of nuclear weapons is not at all clear, and leadership is failing.  The ratification in December 2010 of the New START treaty between Russia and the United States reversed the previous drift in US-Russia nuclear relations.  However, failure to act on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty by leaders in the United States, China, Iran, India, Pakistan, Egypt, Israel, and North Korea and on a treaty to cut off production of nuclear weapons material continues to leave the world at risk from continued development of nuclear weapons.  The world still has approximately 19,500 nuclear weapons, enough power to destroy the Earth’s inhabitants several times over.   The Nuclear Security Summit of 2010 shone a spotlight on securing all nuclear fissile material, but few actions have been taken.  The result is that it is still possible for radical groups to acquire and use highly enriched uranium and plutonium to wreak havoc in nuclear attacks.

Obstacles to a world free of nuclear weapons remain.  Among these are disagreements between the United States and Russia about the utility and purposes of missile defense, as well as insufficient transparency, planning, and cooperation among the nine nuclear weapons states to support a continuing drawdown.  The resulting distrust leads nearly all nuclear weapons states to hedge their bets by modernizing their nuclear arsenals.  While governments claim they are only ensuring the safety of their warheads through replacement of bomb components and launch systems, as the deliberate process of arms reduction proceeds, such developments appear to other states to be signs of substantial military build-ups.

The Science and Security Board also reviewed progress in meeting the challenges of nuclear weapons proliferation.  Ambiguity about Iran’s nuclear power program continues to be the most prominent example of this unsolved problem — centrifuges can enrich uranium for both civilian power plants and military weapons.  It remains to be seen how many additional countries will pursue nuclear power, but without solutions to the dual-use problem and without incentives sufficient to resist military applications, the world is playing with the explosive potential of a million suns and a fire that will not go out.

The potential for nuclear weapons use in regional conflicts in the Middle East, Northeast Asia, and particularly in South Asia is also alarming.  Ongoing efforts to ease tensions, deal with extremism and terrorist acts, and reduce the role of nuclear weapons in international relations have had only halting success.  Yet we believe that international diplomatic pressure as well as burgeoning citizen action will help political leaders to see the folly of continuing to rely on nuclear weapons for national security.

Nuclear energy

In light of over 60 years of improving reactor designs and developing nuclear fission for safer power production, it is disheartening that the world has suffered another calamitous accident. Given this history, the Fukushima disaster raised significant questions that the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ Science and Security Board believe must be addressed.  Safer nuclear reactor designs need to be developed and built, and more stringent oversight, training, and attention are needed to prevent future disasters.  A major question to be addressed is:  How can complex systems like nuclear power stations be made less susceptible to accidents and errors in judgment?

Climate change

In fact, the global community may be near a point of no return in efforts to prevent catastrophe from changes in Earth’s atmosphere.  The International Energy Agency projects that, unless societies begin building alternatives to carbon-emitting energy technologies over the next five years, the world is doomed to a warmer climate, harsher weather, droughts, famine, water scarcity, rising sea levels, loss of island nations, and increasing ocean acidification.  Since fossil-fuel burning power plants and infrastructure built in 2012-2020 will produce energy — and emissions — for 40 to 50 years, the actions taken in the next few years will set us on a path that will be impossible to redirect.  Even if policy leaders decide in the future to reduce reliance on carbon-emitting technologies, it will be too late.

Among the existing alternatives for producing base-load electricity with low carbon dioxide emissions is nuclear power.  Russia, China, India, and South Korea will likely continue to construct plants, enrich fuel, and shape the global nuclear power industry.

Countries that had earlier signaled interest in building nuclear power capacity, such as Vietnam, United Arab Emirates, Turkey, and others, are still intent on acquiring civilian nuclear reactors for electricity despite the Fukushima disaster.  However, a number of countries have renounced nuclear power, including Germany, Italy, and Switzerland.  In Japan, only eight of 54 power plants currently operate because prefecture governors, responding to people’s opposition to nuclear power, have not allowed reactors back online.  In the United States, increased costs of additional safety measures may make nuclear power too expensive to be a realistic alternative to natural gas and other fossil fuels.

The hopeful news is that alternatives to burning coal, oil, and uranium for energy continue to show promise.  Solar and photovoltaic technologies are seeing reductions in price, wind turbines are being adopted for commercial electricity, and energy conservation and efficiency are becoming accepted as sources for industrial production and residential use.  Many of these developments are taking place at municipal and local levels in countries around the world.  In Haiti, for example, a nonprofit group is distributing solar-powered light bulbs to the poor.  In Germany, a smart electrical grid is shifting solar-generated power to cloudy regions and wind power to becalmed areas.  And in California, government is placing caps on carbon emissions that industry will meet. While not perfect, these technologies and practices hold substantial promise.

Yet, we are very concerned that the pace of change may not be adequate and that the transformation that seems to be on its way will not take place in time to meet the hardships that large-scale disruption of the climate portends. As we see it, the major challenge at the heart of humanity’s survival in the 21st century is how to meet energy needs for economic growth in developing and industrial countries without further damaging the climate, without exposing people to loss of health and community, and without risking further spread of nuclear weapons.

The challenges to rid the world of nuclear weapons, harness nuclear power, and meet the nearly inexorable climate disruptions from global warming are complex and interconnected.  In the face of such complex problems, it is difficult to see where the capacity lies to address these challenges.  The political processes in place seem wholly inadequate to meet the challenges to human existence that we confront.

As such, the Science and Security Board is heartened by the Arab Spring, the Occupy movements, political protests in Russia, and by the actions of ordinary citizens in Japan as they call for fair treatment and attention to their needs. Whether meeting the challenges of nuclear power, or mitigating the suffering from human-caused global warming, or preventing catastrophic nuclear conflict in a volatile world, the power of people is essential. For this reason, we ask other scientists and experts to join us in engaging ordinary citizens. Together, we can present the most significant questions to policymakers and industry leaders.  Most important, we can demand answers and action.  As the first atomic scientists of the Bulletin recognized in 1948, the burden of disseminating information about the social and economic “implications of nuclear energy and other new scientific developments rests with the intelligent citizens of the world; the intense and continuing cooperation of the scientists is assured.”

Few of the Bulletin‘s recommendations of 2010 have been taken up; they still require urgent attention if we are to avert catastrophe from nuclear weapons and global warming.  At a minimum these include:

  • Ratification by the United States and China of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and progress on a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty;
  • Implementing multinational management of the civilian nuclear energy fuel cycle with strict standards for safety, security, and nonproliferation of nuclear weapons, including eliminating reprocessing for plutonium separation;
  • Strengthening the International Atomic Energy Agency’s capacity to oversee nuclear materials, technology development, and its transfer;
  • Adopting and fulfilling climate change agreements to reduce carbon dioxide emissions through tax incentives, harmonized domestic regulation and practice;
  • Transforming the coal power sector of the world economy to retire older plants and to require in new plants the capture and storage of the CO2 they produce;
  • Vastly increasing public and private investments in alternatives to carbon emitting energy sources, such as solar and wind, and in technologies for energy storage, and sharing the results worldwide.

The Clock is ticking.

-Science and Security Board, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

====================================================================

Meanwhile, back at the reality ranch, not much to get excited over:

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eyesonu
January 10, 2012 5:08 pm

Onion says:
January 10, 2012 at 2:21 pm
I would reserve judgement on mortality from Fukushima for another 10 – 20 years. The environmental and social damage (uprooting families from their homes) is colossal and ongoing
=============
Are you referring to the tsunami? 20,000 + dead? Drowned? Lost? Gone?
Families? Try entire cities.

January 10, 2012 5:10 pm

Lee L. said:
January 10, 2012 at 3:21 pm
[snippage]
A mere 60 or so years later, the population of Hiroshima is now about 1.2 million while Nagasaki supports more than half a million lives.
————————————————
A year after the blasts, both sites were back to ~background radiation.

Pamela Gray
January 10, 2012 5:17 pm

After a nice warm glass of sherry, I am just tipsy enough to see that slight trend as being flat as a pancake….and highly open to suggestions.

Frank K.
January 10, 2012 5:20 pm

For Immediate release…
“The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists” is formally changing it’s name to reflect it’s new progressive mission. From today, it will be known as the Federation of Atomic Intellectuals and Leftists (F.A.I.L.). F.A.I.L. will begin by replacing it’s famous clock with Gensing Tea leaves. According to F.A.I.L., the world is currently five tea leaves from doom. And, as explained by F.A.I.L. senior representative Jimmy Moonglow, ‘Like…when the tea leaves run out…whoa…it’s over, man!’ ”
“F.A.I.L. will also seek an alliance with #Occupy Wall Street, a group to be known as #OccupyFail. Their work will consist of making unreasonable demands of people and businesses they don’t know and smelling funny.”
End press release.

January 10, 2012 5:39 pm

Allison Macfarlane is a professor at a university?

Dr. Macfarlane is currently an Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Policy at George Mason University … She received her PhD in geology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1992. …she was a Social Science Research Council-MacArthur Foundation fellow in International Peace and Security.. In 2006 MIT Press published her book, “Uncertainty Underground: Yucca Mountain and the Nation’s High-Level Nuclear Waste”, which explores the unresolved technical issues for nuclear waste disposal at Yucca Mountain, Nevada.

So she’s as much a nuclear expert as am I.
And according to the bio., she hasn’t done much actual geology.
In academia, one can be an expert without any real-world experience in the chosen field of applied science.

January 10, 2012 5:48 pm

DonB in VA …
I wish that I were in VA. Then I would make time to visit George Mason University in Fairfax VA and stand in front of the department laughing loudly while pointing at Professor Macfarlane.
But such wouldn’t mock her nearly as much as her own words.

January 10, 2012 5:48 pm

I sent them the following message:
We’ve been minutes away from Doomsday for decades now. How often do you have to be 100% flat wrong before you realize you’re just neo-Malthusian publicity hounds?
And now you’ve added the runaway global warming nonsense to your scare stories! Harold Camping must be on your advisory board.
Just FYI, the world is laughing at you: http://tiny.cc/efu37

But I doubt they’ll publish it.

TomRude
January 10, 2012 5:52 pm

OT: Katherine Hayhoe is in the news in Canada… the Globe and Mail owned by Thomson Reuters is presenting the poor Canadian climate scientist as a victim…
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/canadian-climate-scientist-finds-fame-hate-mail-in-us/article2297802/
And she even got words for you bloggers:
““There’s a well-organized campaign, primarily in the United States but also in other countries, including Canada and Australia, of bloggers, of people in the media, of basically professional climate deniers whose main goal is to abuse, to harass and to threaten anybody who stands up and says climate change is real – especially anybody who’s trying to take that message to audiences that are more traditionally skeptical of this issue.”
And this gem:
“Dr. Hayhoe says she had never met people who didn’t believe in climate change until she moved to the U.S. and began her public work.”
She must have lived in Suzuki’s basement. But since her latest preaching book is acknowledging desmogblog… LOL
“Dr. Hayhoe’s learned of the decision from the media.
“Nice to hear that Gingrich is tossing my #climate chapter in the trash. 100+ unpaid hrs I [could have] spent playing w my baby,” she wrote on”
It still would have been unpaid I suppose…

January 10, 2012 5:54 pm

They havent seen the iceage paper yet. Roll it back 9000 years.

TRM
January 10, 2012 6:05 pm

Fukishima is over? I don’t think so. We’ll be cleaning up that mess for quite some time to come.
Iran a nuclear threat? Yea they might someday actually have the blasting caps like India and Pakistan but no mention of Israel with the big thermonuclear capability.
Pity they didn’t give the LFTR technology away in the 1960’s & 70’s then all these countries would have to make their bombs the old fashioned way.
Climate change? A threat maybe in either direction but nobody can prove we will go into another ice age (likely) or get much warmer (unlikely).
I leave you with a classic. Sorry if metal isn’t your cup of tea. Good work out tune!

Mike the convict
January 10, 2012 6:07 pm

And like every stopped clock on the planet it is itself 100% correct for 1 minute every day.
Hmm I wonder why they didn’t use military time as in 23:55. Probably because 90% of the planet wouldn’t know what it means.
It is about time the ‘scientists’ and media started talking about Destroying Humankind and not destroying the planet via something as lame as a temprature increase or an increase in an inert gas. We are just fleas inhabiting a larger dog/world, I mean its not like I can buy a really good quality sledge hammer and break the planet apart now can I?

DesertYote
January 10, 2012 6:07 pm

Andrew
January 10, 2012 at 4:51 pm
###
“A more wretched hive of scum and villony …”

January 10, 2012 6:14 pm

The clock used to run on Stalin Standard Time. It went backwards whenever the US gave way to Soviet demands, and moved forward whenever the US stood firm. Now that Stalin has morphed into Margaret Mead (not a very difficult PaintShop transition; slightly blonder mustache would do the job) the clock runs on Gaia Standard Time.

MattN
January 10, 2012 6:21 pm

The Doomsday people lost a whole lot of viewers when Soviet Russia collpased. This is a pathetic plea for attention. Disgraceful….

King of Cool
January 10, 2012 6:50 pm

We don’t need Atomic scientists to tell us. Private Frazer told us decades ago:

Wur doomed, entombed and marooned – och aye!

D Caldwell
January 10, 2012 6:52 pm

Yawn…… stretch…… Going to the fridge for a brewski…. Changing the channel….

Merrick
January 10, 2012 6:52 pm

Not that I want to get into (and I won’t) or start a partisan bickering contest, but when I saw the story earlier today I went and looked at all of the changes to the Doomsday Clock position.
On 1947 the Doomsday Clock was established with a setting of seven minutes before midnight.
Over the course of the last 65 years the net change in the Clock time during Republican administrations has been 12 minutes away from midnight. The net change in the Clock time during Democrat administrations has been 14 minutes toward midnight.
In other words, without Republicans the Democrats would have moved us to total anihilation twice over since the Doomsday Clock was established.

Caleb
January 10, 2012 7:04 pm

In my gloomier moods I think we are closer each time they put up another bird-shredder.

January 10, 2012 7:14 pm

Amazing thing is, according to their timeline, in 2007, they added climate change (and -1 min, making it 5 till midnight).
In 2010, with “…worldwide cooperation to reduce nuclear arsenals and limit effect of climate change…”, they moved back a minute (6 till midnight).
Now, 2 years later, they took that minute back.
Since 1947, the total movement has been from 7 till to 5 till. Two minutes in the past 65 years.
Tempus fugit, indeed…

Mike Wryley
January 10, 2012 7:16 pm

One definition of atomic, “very small, infinitessimal”

Amino Acids in Meteorites
January 10, 2012 7:27 pm

Oh sheesh, we’re still all going to die from global warming.
yawn

random non-scientist in the USA
January 10, 2012 7:27 pm

Well it looks like a typical clock soooo….it’s right twice a day? Using minute intervals, that’s an accuracy rate of .139%, see consistancy is GOOD.

nc
January 10, 2012 7:50 pm

Now I see why no nuke plants being built in north America, if this shows the level of atomic skill.

Crispin in Waterloo
January 10, 2012 8:00 pm

Feedback to “Bulletin”
“I was surprised by the stridency in your recent message against all forms of nuclear power. If the Fukushima plant was a CANDU reactor there would have been no problem at all. Japan bought 1970’s crap American reactors designed to be expensive and complicated using fuel that costs a fortune to prepare, secure and supply. The result was inevitable.
Surely your organisation of Atomic scientists are the ones who would be the most aware that non-Uranium nuclear power poses none of the proliferation problems related to bombs and long storage solutions.
Similarly the strident statements about the world being 5 years from inevitable climate disaster from human emissions of CO2 leaves the reasonably-read public bewildered. Do Atomic scientists not keep up with events? Not a single prediction of impending doom (flooding, climate refugees, billions dead etc) have been manifested after three decades of impending doom. The influence of CO2 is being grossly overstated and the role of galactic cosmic ray-induced low cloud cover underestimated. Surely Atomic scientists are aware of the role of ionizing cosmic radiation in the formation of cloud condensation nuclei. After all, the effects of radiation is their field of study. Please read a little more broadly.
The assessments of the position of the clock hands are valueable and should reflect reality and the justification should be based on science, not what is difficult to see as other than just scare-mongering. The world faces real threats from atomic weapons. That threat is best addressed by providing alternative nuclear power designs that are uselss for creating weapons. Is not the Atomic scientist the one to take the lead on this? Why is the promotion of virtually limitless energy from Thorium left to non-scientists and scientists from non-atomic sectors? Why don’t you lead your own field of enterprise?
Instead I read in your message promotion of the stupidest, most uneconomical technolgy ever proposed which is CCS – a boondoggle as bad as the deliberate choice of U238 as the most expensive fuel system available for US power plants. Yes it creates vast incomes for a few corporations, but it is not really a solution, is it? There is hardly any Uranium on this planet anyway. Peak Uranium: 2035.
Atomic scientists, please sharpen your pencils and start applying your minds to the safe generation of power on a global scale. It is literally your job to do so. And move the clock hands back an hour.”

DJ
January 10, 2012 8:01 pm

…Huh? Isn’t it about 20 after by now?