42. OMNI Climate Memo Mondays, September 27, 2021
Books by MARK LYNAS[
High Tide: The Truth
About Our Climate Crisis (2004).
Picador. (384 pages).
Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter
Planet (2007; 2008 in
USA). (358 pages).
Carbon Counter (2010). Collins. (192 pages).
The God Species:
Saving the Planet in the Age of Humans (2011). National
Geographic. (288
pages).
Nuclear 2.0: Why a Green Future Needs Nuclear Power (2013). (112
pages).
Our Final Warning: Six Degrees of Climate Emergency (2020).. Fourth
Estate (2020.
Mark
Lynas’ “Six Degrees” books on climate catastrophe
Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet. 2008.
Our Final Warning: Six Degrees of Climate Emergency. 2020.
Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet. 2007.
Publisher’s description
Possibly the most graphic treatment of global warming that has yet been published, Six Degrees is what readers of Al Gore's best-selling An Inconvenient Truth or Ross Gelbspan's Boiling Point will turn to next. Written by the acclaimed author of High Tide, this highly relevant and compelling book uses accessible journalistic prose to distill what environmental scientists portend about the consequences of human pollution for the next hundred years. In 2001, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released a landmark report projecting average global surface temperatures to rise between 1.4 degrees and 5.8 degrees Celsius (roughly 2 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of this century. Based on this forecast, author Mark Lynas outlines what to expect from a warming world, degree by degree. At 1 degree Celsius, most coral reefs and many mountain glaciers will be lost. A 3-degree rise would spell the collapse of the Amazon rainforest, disappearance of Greenland's ice sheet, and the creation of deserts across the Midwestern United States and southern Africa. A 6-degree increase would eliminate most life on Earth, including much of humanity. Based on authoritative scientific articles, the latest computer models, and information about past warm events in Earth history, Six Degrees promises to be an eye-opening warning that humanity will ignore at its peril.
Our Final Warning: Six Degrees of
Climate Emergency (HarperCollins-Fourth Estate,
2020).
Book REVIEW
Mark Lynas's 'Final warning' on
climate: 'It's all on us, here, now,' says reviewer
By Spencer Weart | Wednesday, August 19, 2020
https://yaleclimateconnections.org/2020/08/mark-lynas-final-warning-on-climate-its-all-on-us-here-now/
Global warming first became personal for me in 2010. I was
backpacking in the incomparable Wind Rivers in western Wyoming. I can’t tell
you how much, over many years, I have loved those mountains, the wildest great
range of the Lower 48; my tent was the only human thing on the shores of a lake
a mile long.
But the human imprint
had arrived. Hillsides had turned brown with dying pines, acres were littered
with gray dead tree trunks. This was the work of bark beetles no longer controlled by cold winters, and you can see
it now all over the American West.
Bark beetles were a “known unknown” of global warming. In a 1990
report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) had already warned
that climate change could bring outbreaks of harmful pests, but I don’t think
anyone predicted the specific bark beetle disaster. As for the “unknown
knowns,” I recently went snorkeling in Yucatan: a deeply sad experience. We
have long been warned that the miraculous pageant of coral reefs could dwindle
to a miserable remnant … but already?
21st-century climate
reminder: ‘That happened faster than I expected.’
The motto for 21st-century climate
science might be, “That happened faster than I expected.” Antarctic researcher
Christina Hulbe suggested this to some colleagues a few years ago, and indeed
the dwindling of the Arctic Ocean ice pack and the forces promoting
disintegration of the Greenland Ice Sheet and Antarctic ice shelves have come
decades earlier than expected. But other features of climate change are also
showing up sooner than many climate scientists expected.
There’s a stunning example in British author Mark Lynas’s essential new book, Our Final Warning: Six Degrees of
Climate Emergency (HarperCollins-Fourth Estate,
2020). It’s an update of his 2007 book Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter
Planet, also a must-read for anyone concerned about the future of our
civilization and our planet. Both books give us a ladder of chapters, each
reporting findings for what scientists expect to happen at a given level of
global warming. Lynas starts with one degree above pre-industrial temperatures,
a level not reached in 2007 but passed in 2016. He continues through two, three
… up to six degrees, a planet so catastrophically different from the present
that science can barely imagine it.
In his 2007 chapter on three degrees of warming, Lynas wrote about
monster storms. A fine writer, he brought the science alive with a vivid
description of an imaginary 2045 hurricane dumping enormous amounts of rain on
– well, a random American city, he picked Houston. In his present book, he
repeats the description, now moved up to the one-degree chapter, to remind us
of what already happened in 2017 when hurricane
Harvey devastated Houston.
Harvey’s behavior was an “unknown unknown.” There appears to be an
increasing tendency for hurricanes to “stall” and hammer a place for days, and
some kind of slowing down may also be showing up in prolonged heat waves and
cold outbreaks. Some experts explain this in terms of the decreased latitudinal
temperature gradient – never mind, a technical debate. The point is that some
consequences of global warming won’t be imagined at all until they hit us. To
be sure, half a century of scientific reports have made clear that there would
be climate surprises. And since we are well-adapted to the present climate,
most surprises will be unwelcome.
Lynas does not talk much about surprises. His book concentrates on
the “known knowns,” on what scientists think are the most likely outcomes at
each level of warming. He has scanned
thousands of technical papers in journals that even most scientists rarely
peruse. He has talked with the experts; and he lays out the best information he
can find.
I won’t go over it all here. If you don’t know the basic facts,
you really should read the book. Suffice it to say that at three degrees above our grandparents’ climate, it’s hard to see
how the world could sustain a broadly prosperous and tolerant civilization such
as many now enjoy. At four degrees, maintaining any kind of civilization at all
becomes problematic. And it’s more likely than not that today’s young people
will experience such global temperatures (or worse) in their lifetimes, unless
we make radical policy changes.
How good is Lynas’s science? There’s a risk of confirmation bias:
no matter how hard you try, anyone concerned about climate change will be
inclined to pay greater attention to worrisome findings than to soothing ones.
I’ve struggled with this myself, but I
am confident that Lynas correctly reports what the peer-reviewed literature
describes.
But is the literature itself
biased? Have referees and journal editors, and for that matter researchers,
focused on investigations of dangers? Yes, and that’s the right thing to do. It’s appropriate to give
attention to, say, a calculation of which cities will become death traps during
heat waves, or how far the yields of major crops will decrease. All of the many
kinds of disasters that Lynas sees as likely are at least plausible. Many of them
are in cold fact much more likely to happen than not, and some are already
underway.
It’s happening faster than
we expected. The world has temporized for so long that decisive action must
begin – ahem, twenty years ago – but it’s not quite too late. The IPCC has
explained that the decisions made in the next 10 years will determine the
climate of the planet for the next 10,000 years or more. Even if nations all
meet their pledges for the Paris Climate Agreement (which few of them are
doing), our destiny is three degrees or more: policies must change radically
and immediately. So the entire future of human civilization depends on what we
do, us, here, now. Who can grasp that? It sounds like we’ve wandered into a
science-fiction movie. But it’s just geophysics.
Sometimes history balances on the point of a needle. For example,
a few thousand votes in a close race could choose a senator; the vote of that
single senator could make the difference between strong action by the United
States and no action at all. And the world will take notice.
[CLIMATE POLITICS]
Between now and November
every American can work for candidates in key Senate races, or not. What they
decide to do will be more important than anything that almost any other group
of humans has ever done. I know, I know, it’s not possible, who wants such
responsibility … but there it is. It’s all on us, here, now. Spencer Weart is emeritus Director of the Center for History of
Physics at the American Institute of Physics. His publications include The
Discovery of Global Warming and a much larger history/science website.
“Interview:
Mark Lynas, author, Six Degrees: Our future on a hotter planet.” 2020.
https://environmentjournal.online/articles/interview-mark-lynas-author-six-degrees/
Mark Lynas is an
author, journalist and environmental campaigner, and in 2007 he wrote his first
book Six Degrees: Our Future on a hotter
planet.
However, in 2015 we
surpassed one degree of global warming and so the first chapter of his book
became instantly outdated.
This has led Mark
Lynas to re-write a newer version of his book which was published in April
2020. In his book, Mark outlines what life will be like on a warmer planet
based on what we know now. Environment Journal got in touch to
find out more.
[Lynas’ conclusion] https://environmentjournal.online/articles/interview-mark-lynas-author-six-degrees/
Are you really
optimistic about the future?
Optimism isn’t about
blind hope – it’s about the determination to carry on.
We need to use science
and technology to address the problems – we need to focus on progress and we
need to pull together the kind of responses that society needs and we need to
do so globally.
An individualistic
focus does not work – we need to have collective behaviour change.
The book is
available here:
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