[Mb-civic] Earth warned on 'tipping points'
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Tue Aug 31 17:27:25 PDT 2004
Calamities Ahead and New Hopes
Earth warned on 'tipping points'
By Alex Kirby BBC News Online environment correspondent
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3597584.stm
26 August, 2004
The world has barely begun to recognise the danger of setting off
rapid and irreversible changes in some crucial natural systems, a
scientist says.
Professor John Schellnhuber says the most important environmental
issues for humans are among the least understood.
He told a briefing in Sweden that the Asian monsoon was one of the
"tipping points" that could change very quickly.
He said a better understanding of the risks was as important as the
programme to prevent collisions with asteroids.
Professor Schellnhuber is research director of the UK's Tyndall
Centre for Climate Change Research.
High stakes
He was speaking at the EuroScience Forum in Stockholm, at a
briefing by the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme
entitled Beyond Global Warming: Where On Earth Are We Going?
Professor Schellnhuber said 12 "hotspots" had been identified so far,
areas which acted like massive regulators of the Earth's environment.
If these critical regions were subjected to stress, they could trigger
large-scale, rapid changes across the entire planet. But not enough
was known about them to be able to predict when the limits of
tolerance were reached.
"We have so far completely underestimated the importance of these
locations," he said.
"What we do know is that going beyond critical thresholds in these
regions could have dramatic consequences for humans and other life
forms."
One example of a hotspot was the North Atlantic current, the ocean
circulation pattern responsible for bringing warmer air to northern
Europe, the collapse of which could lead to a very large regional
climate shift.
Faltering monsoon
Others were the West Antarctic ice sheet, the Sahara desert, and the
forests of the Amazon basin. Yet another hotspot, Professor
Schellnhuber said, was the Asian monsoon system.
He told BBC News Online: "Modelling has shown that if air pollution
and land use change, this could alter the albedo, the reflectivity, of
the land.
"This in turn could weaken or even suppress the monsoon, and there
is evidence that several times in the last few years it has in fact been
weaker.
"We're investing too much in things like improving the accuracy of
our weather forecasts, while the really vital elements in the Earth's
system are the unstable phenomena like the monsoon.
"We should have a much better understanding of these tipping
points, and we have to do everything we can to stop short of
triggering these instabilities.
Unforeseen speed
"That means we have to know where they are, and they've been off
the radar screen for far too long.
"Scientists have begun to realise that change could be sudden, not
gradual - in some cases it could happen within a few decades."
Professor Schellnhuber urged a coordinated global effort to improve
understanding and monitoring of Earth's "Achilles' heels".
He said: "Such an effort is every bit as important as Nasa's valuable
asteroid-spotting programme designed to protect the planet from
collisions.
"If we can afford to gaze up at the sky looking for asteroids, we
should be able to watch our own planet with as much care."
http://www.earthrainbownetwork.com/Archives2004/TurningTide16
.htm
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