The ravages of climate change thunder onward, and recent
science doesn’t provide much hope.
Coral decline has been an issue, associated with coral disease, coral bleaching and lots more. A new study indicates the problems just keep coming. And our use of carbon is (surprise!) still climbing.
(Parenthetically, it’s election season. You need to ask every candidate
whether they deny climate change, in which case don't vote for them, And more importantly, ask what they’ll do to
combat it. And vote accordingly.)
A 30-year study of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef shows that
coral growth has dropped an astounding 40 percent. Here is the
ScienceDaily story on that.
The
abstract of the paper, published in the journal
Geochimic et Cosmochimica Acta, suggests pretty clearly that ocean
acidification—a result of increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere—is the
cause:
“The similarity between the predicted and the measured decrease in (calcification)
suggests that ocean acidification may be the primary cause for the lower CaCO3
precipitation rate on the Lizard Island reef flat.”
We're not aware of similar studies in the Hawaiian Islands, but it's reasonable to conclude that if it's happening on the largest reef system in the world, it might be happening elsewhere.
And, for all the talk, we’re not having much of an impact on
the problem. Carbon dioxide emissions by human activities, far from declining
or even staying level, are increasing.
They're increasing more than the global average in the United States, India and China. The European Union has decreased carbon release, although it continues to import large amounts of goods from China, so it effectively shifts some of its carbon production there.
This is, of course, maddening. It’s like being on a careening bus, headed for a cliff, and
being unable to agree to use the brakes.
A new study by the United Kingdom’s Tyndall Centre for
Climate Change Research and the College of Engineering, Mathematics and
Physical Sciences at the University of Exeter, says carbon dioxide releases
into the atmosphere will rise in 2014 by another 2.5 percent, to 40 billion
tonnes.
As the Great Barrier Reef inquiry and myriad other studies show, the results are
bad already. But they can and will get worse. Many scientists feel that 2 degrees
Celsius is a tipping point for catastrophic change.
"We have already used two-thirds of the total amount of
carbon we can burn, in order to keep warming below the crucial 2°C level. If we
carry on at the current rate we will reach our limit in as little as 30 years'
time–and that is without any continued growth in emission levels.
"The
implication of no immediate action is worryingly clear—either we take a
collective responsibility to make a difference, and soon, or it will be too
late," said Pierre Friedlingstein, a professor at Exeter and lead author
of the paper.
Need some data points? This is from a press release from the
University of East Anglia:
China's CO2
emissions grew by 4.2 per cent in 2013, the USA's grew by 2.9 per cent, and
India's emissions grew by 5.1 per cent.
The EU has
decreased its emissions by 1.8 per cent, though it continues to export a third
of its emissions to China and other producers through imported goods and
services.
China's CO2
emissions per person overtook emissions in the EU for the first time in 2013.
China's emissions are now larger than the US and EU combined. 16 per cent of
China's emissions are for goods and services which are exported elsewhere.
Emissions in the
UK decreased by 2.6 per cent in 2013 caused by a decline in the use of coal and
gas. However the UK exports a third of its emissions by consuming goods and
services which are produced elsewhere.
CO2 emissions are
caused primarily by burning fossil fuels, as well as by cement production and
deforestation. Deforestation accounts for 8 per cent of CO2 emissions.
Historical and
future CO2 emissions must remain below a total 3,200 billion tonnes to be in
with a 66 per cent chance of keeping climate change below 2°C. But two thirds
(2,000 billion tonnes) of this quota have already been used.
If global
emissions continue at their current rate, the remaining 1,200 billion tonnes
will be used up in around 30 years – one generation.
Global emissions
must reduce by more than 5 per cent each year over several decades to keep
climate change below 2°C.
(Here is the citation for the coral study: J. Silverman, K.
Schneider, D.I. Kline, T. Rivlin, A. Rivlin, S. Hamylton, B. Lazar, J. Erez, K.
Caldeira. Community calcification in
Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef: A 33 year perspective. Geochimica et
Cosmochimica Acta, 2014; DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2014.09.011)
© Jan TenBruggencate 2014