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The Best Science Writing Online 2012
Showcasing more than fifty of the most provocative, original, and significant online essays from 2011, The Best Science Writing Online 2012 will change the way...
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Careful study of the long-term climate record has shown that even a minor shock to the system can cause an enormous change in outcome, a nonlinear response that has come to be called "abrupt climate change." Less well recognized is that our social and economic systems are also highly sensitive to climate perturbations. Seemingly modest fluctuations in rainfall, temperature and other meteorological factors can create havoc in vulnerable societies.
Recent years have shown that shifts in rainfall can bring down governments and even set off wars. The African Sahel, just south of the Sahara, provides a dramatic and poignant demonstration. The deadly carnage in Darfur, Sudan, for example, which is almost always discussed in political and military terms, has roots in an ecological crisis directly arising from climate shocks. Darfur is an arid zone with overlapping, growing populations of impoverished pastoralists (tending goats, cattle and camels) and sedentary farmers. Both groups depend on rainfall for their livelihoods and lives. The average rainfall has probably declined in the past few decades but is in any case highly variable, leaving Darfur prone to drought. When the rains faltered in the 1980s, violence ensued. Communities fought to survive by raiding others and attempting to seize or protect scarce water and food supplies.
Public debates tend to neglect powerful ecological effects because we focus on politics.
A drought-induced famine is much more likely to trigger conflict in a place that is already impoverished and bereft of any cushion of physical or financial resources. Darfur was also pushed over the edge by ethnic and political conflict, with ambitious, violent and unscrupulous leaders preying on the ethnic divisions. These vulnerabilities, of course, have not been unique to Darfur. Several studies have shown that a temporary decline in rainfall has generally been associated throughout sub-Saharan Africa with a marked rise in the likelihood of violent conflict in the following months.
Africa is certainly not alone in experiencing the linkages of climate shocks and extreme social instability. Rainfall shifts associated with El Ni¿o cycles have had similarly catastrophic consequences. The massive 1998 El Ni¿o produced huge floods off the coast of Ecuador, which destroyed a considerable amount of export crops and aquaculture. That led to a failure of loans to Ecuador's already weak banking system, which in turn help-ed to provoke a bank run, an unprecedented economic collapse and eventually the ouster of the government. Halfway around the world the same El Ni¿o caused an extreme drought in Indonesia, coinciding with Asia's massive financial crisis. Indonesia's drought and resulting food shortage contributed to financial and political destabilization and to the end of President Suharto's 31-year rule. As in Ecuador, the short-term economic collapse was by far the largest in Indonesia's modern history.
Climate skeptics who ask impatiently why we should care about "a degree or two" increase in the global mean temperature understand neither the climate nor the social and economic systems in which we live. Both climate and society are subject to great instability, nonlinear responses and high unpredictability. Climate changes may influence storms, droughts, floods, crop yields, disease vectors and much more, well beyond what the current "average" forecasts suggest. And the resulting ecological effects, especially on societies already facing hunger or financial and political fragility, can be enormous and dire. Our public debates tend to neglect these powerful effects because we focus on politics and only rarely on the underlying environmental pressures.
Once we recognize the ecological risks to our economic well-being and even to our national security, we will begin to look much harder for practical approaches to mitigating the pressures that our global society is now placing on the earth's ecosystems. We will then need to increase our preparations for the intensified shocks that are surely on their way. The intertwined strategies of mitigation and adaptation will be the topics of future columns.
This article was originally published with the title Ecology and Political Upheaval.
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1 Comments
Add CommentCry politicians! see the folly and take action.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisThe priority is getting people to feel the emotional urgency in turning around
the abomidable things done to the planet. Stop the apathy and lathery now. We are faced with threats on all fronts, dominating controller aim to annilate the mass majority of people and continue convincing authority figures to sacrifice there values and beliefs in the onslaught of killing off the population on earth because they twisted feeble minds into believing it will be sustainable, there are holes in the ozone, oil addiction that chokes the atmoshere of orgone energy, and others who blame for everything, as-not-to change from convoluted habits. We are accountable to reverse the damage to planet. We may not know excately humanities orgins but we have reverse the damage we cause or we will detroy the planet with our laziness and wastefulness.
For survival sake change as much as possible in your life. Whatever you believe will result in satifying others needs. The only way out of the mess is to invest our way into the future. People naturally would feel strong emotions when wrong-doings are commited and thats what I expect. You can stand up for what you need to do now, be well and crusade for wellness. Only you know excately what you need to do. All that some people are feeling right now is excrucating pain and they are connected to us and if they die in vain becaue we pass up real life adventures for being entairtained til we are old and have nothing left then that will be the finalily. Isiah said blow your trumpet loudly. The challenges we face today mean we live or die depends changing and who turns the situation around. Restoring order requires agressively joining the challenge of organizing an alliance to end all alliances.
I pray you all have the resiliance, tenacity, fortitude, vigiliance, bravery, courage, and will to do what you must in bringing truth and reconcilliation to all the nations of earth and peace will be there. Everyone believes they are decieved and believe it is in there best interest to not take command of this mass deluded population. But who really knows the history of human origins and this world isn't meant to be depleted of resources for getting sick off junk food, exploiting helpless people. Resources are reneewable if they are used judically. This is abuse what's happening and together we abused the planet, and we cause people to despair. I am a citizen of earth and a child of God and would rather everyone strive for total independance than indifferent attitudes ruin our precious pearl planet a jewel in the sky. To God be the glory, the power, and strength forever, Amen.