
From the Earth System Science Partnership where they feel licensed to tell the rest of us about the “state of the planet” we have this press release admonishing an “unequivocal warning”. The video seems to indicate that we should blame the British for starting it all.
State of the planet
Scientists describe humanity’s global impact as ‘The Great Acceleration’ and offer ominous outlook: An uncertain future on a much hotter world
Time is running out to minimize the risk of setting in motion irreversible and long-term climate change and other dramatic changes to Earth’s life support system, according to scientists speaking at the Planet Under Pressure conference, which began in London today.
The unequivocal warning is delivered on the first day of the four-day conference opening with the latest readings of Earth’s vital signs.
In subsequent days at the meeting, nearly 3,000 experts spanning the spectrum of interconnected scientific interests, will examine solutions, hurdles and ways to break down the barriers to progress. The conference is the largest gathering of experts in development and global environmental changes in advance of June’s UN “Rio+20” summit in Brazil.
“The last 50 years have without doubt seen one of the most rapid transformations of the human relationship with the natural world,” says speaker Will Steffen, a global change expert from the Australian National University.
“Many human activities reached take-off points sometime in the 20th Century and sharply accelerated towards the end of the century. We saw a ‘Great Acceleration’.”
“It is the scale and speed of the Great Acceleration that is truly remarkable. This has largely happened within one human lifetime.”
Key indicators of the planet’s state, according to the speakers: higher levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, phosphorus extraction and fertilizer production causing many large dead zones in coastal areas; rising air and ocean temperatures; melting sea ice, polar ice sheets and Arctic permafrost; rising sea levels and ocean acidification; biodiversity loss; land use changes; and growing consumption of freshwater supplies and energy by a growing global population, of which billions of people still lack even the most basic elements of well-being.
At a planetary level, humanity is altering the global carbon cycle, water cycle and nitrogen cycle, says Professor Steffen. Indeed, humans now produce more reactive nitrogen artificially than all natural processes on land.
“Where on Earth are we going?” he asks, underlining several potentially dangerous environmental “tipping points” foreseen, among them the melting of the polar ice sheets and the thawing of perennially frozen northern permafrost soils.
Current research estimates the permafrost alone stores the equivalent of roughly twice the carbon in the atmosphere, he says. Under a “high warming scenario,” projected releases of greenhouse gas emissions from melting Arctic permafrost are the equivalent of 30-63 gigatonnes (Gt) of carbon dioxide by 2040, 232-380 Gt by 2100, and 549-865 Gt by 2300. By comparison, fossil fuel emissions today are roughly 10 Gt per year.
“The key point is: Either we turn around a lot of these trends – the carbon dioxide trend, deforestation and so on – or we allow them to continue and push beyond critical thresholds.”
“There are signs that some drivers of global change are slowing or changing,” says fellow speaker Professor Diana Liverman, co-Director of the Institute of the Environment at the University of Arizona and visiting Oxford University academic.
“Population growth is slowing and will level off; the intensity of energy and carbon required for a unit of production is declining; agricultural intensification is slowing and forests are starting to expand in some regions.”
“On the other hand, average resource consumption per person, already high in some regions, is growing steeply in emerging economies even as many poor people cannot meet basic human needs.
“In some countries people are consuming far too much, including carbon, water and other resources embodied in trade. We have a long way to go to turn things around.”
Liverman notes a time lapse animation offering vivid evidence that Earth has entered a new geological epoch hallmarked by the profound ecosystem impacts of one species – humans – so much so that it marks an entirely new geological timespan: the “Anthropocene.”
Online at www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEMse22h8c8, it illustrates the dramatic growth of carbon dioxide emissions from the start of the industrial revolution — spreading from the UK in 1750 across Europe, North America and to Japan by 1900.
“By the end of the 20th Century we have high emissions in China, India, Europe and eastern North America but relatively little across Latin America and Africa. Here lies the core of the debate about responsibilities for climate change in relation to historical and per capita emissions.”
She also refers a recent UK study showing the highest income earners are responsible for three times the level of emissions compared with lowest income earners.
“In countries with high income inequality, the richest 10% of the population may be responsible for more than 50% of the greenhouse gas emissions – and the growing middle classes of many developing or transitional countries are developing consumption habits that add to the burden on the earth system.”
Says conference co-chair and UNESCO director of the science-policy division, Dr Lidia Brito: “If you like, our presenters today are akin to doctors saying ‘look, you may not feel too sick at the moment but you’ve got high blood pressure, your cholesterol is going up, and your lifestyle is not conducive to good health.'”
“There is time to turn these trends around and promising, more positive messages will be delivered by colleagues in days to come. We look forward to discussions of our most promising options, the barriers to change and to a prescription for the future.”
NOTE TO EDITORS
The research discussed in the press release, the conclusions drawn and the opinions offered are those of individual speakers or research teams at the Planet Under Pressure conference.
More information about Planet under Pressure Conference
The international science conference will be the biggest gathering of global environmental change specialists in advance of the United Nations Rio+20 Summit: 2,500 scientists, policymakers, industry and media representatives will meet to hear the latest research findings on the state of the planet and discuss concepts for planetary stewardship and societal and economic transformation towards global sustainability.
More information on the web: http://www.planetunderpressure2012.net
Follow the conference via RSS: http://www.planetunderpressure2012.net/xml/news.xml
Live web streaming, daily news show and live audio feeds: http://c3379912.workcast.net/planetunderpressure.html
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Now let me see, who started off all the problems we have. Oh yes it was scientists. Seems a lot of learning is also a dangerous thing.
We Brits should apologise for having anything to do with the Agricultural Revolution, the Scientific Revolution and the Industrial Revolution. If 2,500 ‘experts’ say so, it must be right.
What is the collective noun for moonbats? A ‘bidet’? (Many around, usefulness unclear).
hillbilly33 is spot on what 90% of australians think. only the water mellon heads, communists, and the brain dead think otherwise please forgive them as they have no brains or commonsense
I’m not surprised we British are getting the blame. No doubt some historian will one day “prove” that we crucified Jesus, assassinated Ghandi and wiped out the dinosaurs.
“The video seems to indicate that we should blame the British for starting it all.”
Blast it, we’ve been rumbled again! Quick, someone get out a press release shifting the blame to the Romans!
Just don’t let them realise that it was a bunch of rebel Brits who wrote that Declaration of Independence thing too, else we’ll *never* hear the end of it…
les says:
March 27, 2012 at 3:26 am
I’m not surprised we British are getting the blame. No doubt some historian will one day “prove” that we crucified Jesus, assassinated Ghandi and wiped out the dinosaurs.
‘proof’?……..
Just bloody apologise…..
Oh and cough up compo while you’re at it………
John F. Hultquist says:
March 26, 2012 at 9:40 pm
“Many human activities reached take-off points sometime in the 20th Century. . .”
Did I miss something, or is this a new ‘scary’ phrase?
__________________________________________
The only “Take-off point” or “Tipping- point” that the 20th Century has reached is the high level in the ratio of Rent-seekers to producers of wealth. In a 1980’s lecture I went to by Peter Drucker, he pointed out that we had 10 support staff for every 1 worker (producer of wealth) A bit mind boggling when you think that about 2 centuries ago, in the 1790’s 90% of the US population was self-reliant farmers.
In the Past: HOW EXCESSIVE GOVERNMENT KILLED ANCIENT ROME
Today: CLIMATE COUP – the Politics
We seem to have reached the point where we now have 10 wolves agreeing on how to carve up the lamb. Not a good situation. Although given the Malthusians behind a lot of this, I would not want to be the other 9 wolves. At least the lamb is seen to have value.
David Cage says:
March 27, 2012 at 12:02 am
…. This prediction is getting harder and harder to find on search engines almost as though there is a concerted effort to see it disappear.
_____________________________
Making statements “Disappear” or worse changing the statements without changing the dates is quite typical of The Ministry of Truth
What expertise do these so-called ‘experts’ actually have, other than in the art of making a complete idiot of oneself?
“Here’s a scary phrase: “planetary stewardship and societal and economic transformation towards global sustainability”.”
“planetary stewardship” = one-world totalitarian government.
“societal transformation” = socialist and micromanaged lives at the most intimate level
“economic transformation” = fascist control of all industry, energy, and the people by force and control of all enterprise
“sustainabiliy” = an impossible goal that will forever necessitate increasingly radical and costly “sacrifices” by the oppressed citizens
These people need to be gone.
les says:
March 27, 2012 at 3:26 am
d Ghandi and wiped out the dinosaurs.
————
And I do believe it was the Brits that came over to US and killed our buffalo to near extinction, if I’m not mistaken.
Hey! How ’bout giving us polluting Americans some credit here!!
(As I look out at skies w/almost unlimited visibility)
Acceleration towards civilization maybe. But that is only an evil in the eyes of the acolytes of Gaia.
“billions of people still lack even the most basic elements of well-being.”
And you still want to reduce the production of fertilizers and use of water?
From the BBCs flagship science programme HORIZON
Global Wierding
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01f893x
“Something weird seems to be happening to our weather – it appears to be getting more extreme.
In the past few years we have shivered through two record-breaking cold winters and parts of the country have experienced intense droughts and torrential floods. It is a pattern that appears to be playing out across the globe. Hurricane chasers are recording bigger storms and in Texas, record-breaking rain has been followed by record-breaking drought.
Horizon follows the scientists who are trying to understand what’s been happening to our weather and investigates if these extremes are a taste of what is to come”
The programme should appear on utube eventually
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=bbc+horizon+2012&oq=bbc+horizon&aq=1&aqi=g10&aql=&gs_l=youtube.1.1.0l10.10469l10469l0l13312l1l1l0l0l0l0l93l93l1l1l0.
As I ask my students: are you personally willing to do without all the things in your life that are fueled by fossil fuels? If not, then hush.
Best way to comment is to tweet using the #Planet2012 hashtag, which can be monitored
at http://consortium.cgiar.org/planet-under-pressure/ where you can also add commentr – though they’ll probablt censor it… A colleague tried leafletting the conference and distributed a few but was eventually escorted off the site by security guards. No chance of letting the poor delegates (at £400 each!) actually meet reality.
Problem: Most of the public, and even some wobbly and unreliable governments, are beginning to dodge and shield themselves from our Boolshite.
Solution: Shovel more, faster!
As a Brit I am today wearing “sackcloth and ashes”. Well actually just the sackcloth, as making the ashes would mean a release of CO2.
All these attendees may now add an additional middle name to their full names: `Lysenko`, because they are all useful idiots. How else should we regard then?
Dave
“Many human activities reached take-off points sometime in the 20th Century and sharply accelerated towards the end of the century. We saw a ‘Great Acceleration’.”
Yes, we all see the great acceleration in the skeptic blogosphere and rational thinking.
It’s worse than we thought!
Has anyone got a picture of an arse and an elbow for these scaremongers to help them out.
Seems to me they’ve spent a lot of money (and CO2) just to avoid sending emails. Have they not heard of the telephone or are they scared of phone hackers?