The world is blankly looking up the sky for rains. Non stoppable heat waves had laughing fast run on the planet. Even some of the coolest places faced the heat of the summer this year.With no signs of rain in the coming days the world is heading towards a severe drought situation. Without blaming others, the Governmnet should step forward to sought out the pending problems. Otherwise it will lead anti-social events that may the toll of the government.
Paul Krugman writes in The New York Times on 25 July 2012
A couple of weeks ago northeastern United States was gripped by a
severe heat wave. As I write this, however, it’s a fairly cool day in
New Jersey, considering that it’s late July. Weather is like that; it
fluctuates. And this banal observation may be what dooms us to climate
catastrophe, in two ways. On one side, the variability of temperatures
from day to day and year to year makes it easy to miss, ignore or
obscure the longer-term upward trend. On the other, even a fairly modest
rise in average temperatures translates into a much higher frequency of
extreme events — like the devastating drought now gripping America’s
heartland — that do vast damage.
On the first point: Even with the best will in the world, it would be
hard for most people to stay focused on the big picture in the face of
short-run fluctuations. When the mercury is high and the crops are
withering, everyone talks about it, and some make the connection to
global warming. But let the days grow a bit cooler and the rains fall,
and inevitably people’s attention turns to other matters.
Making things much worse, of course, is the role of players who don’t
have the best will in the world. Climate change denial is a major
industry, lavishly financed by Exxon, the Koch brothers and others with a
financial stake in the continued burning of fossil fuels. And
exploiting variability is one of the key tricks of that industry’s
trade. Applications range from the Fox News perennial — “It’s cold
outside! Al Gore was wrong!” — to the constant claims that we’re
experiencing global cooling, not warming, because it’s not as hot right
now as it was a few years back.
How should we think about the relationship between climate change and
day-to-day experience? Almost a quarter of a century ago James Hansen,
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration scientist who did more
than anyone to put climate change on the agenda, suggested the analogy
of loaded dice. Imagine, he and his associates suggested, representing
the probabilities of a hot, average or cold summer by historical
standards as a dice with two faces painted red, two white and two blue.
By the early 21st century, they predicted, it would be as if four of the
faces were red, one white and one blue. Hot summers would become much
more frequent, but there would still be cold summers now and then.
And so it has proved. As documented in a new paper by Dr Hansen and
others, cold summers by historical standards still happen, but rarely,
while hot summers have in fact become roughly twice as prevalent. And
nine of the 10 hottest years on record have occurred since 2000.
But that’s not all: really extreme high temperatures, the kind of
thing that used to happen very rarely in the past, have now become
fairly common. Think of it as rolling two sixes, which happens less than
three per cent of the time with fair dice, but more often when the dice
are loaded. And this rising incidence of extreme events, reflecting the
same variability of weather that can obscure the reality of climate
change, means that the costs of climate change aren’t a distant
prospect, decades in the future. On the contrary, they’re already here,
even though so far global temperatures are only about one degree
Fahrenheit above their historical norms, a small fraction of their
eventual rise if we don’t act.
The great Midwestern drought is a case in point. This drought has
already sent corn prices to their highest level ever. If it continues,
it could cause a global food crisis, because the US heartland is still
the world’s breadbasket. And yes, the drought is linked to climate
change: such events have happened before, but they’re much more likely
now than they used to be.
Now, may be this drought will break in time to avoid the worst. But
there will be more events like this. Joseph Romm, the influential
climate blogger, has coined the term “Dust-Bowlification” for the
prospect of extended periods of extreme drought in formerly productive
agricultural areas. He has been arguing for some time that this
phenomenon, with its disastrous effects on food security, is likely to
be the leading edge of damage from climate change, taking place over the
next few decades; the drowning of Florida by rising sea levels and all
that will come later. And here it comes.
Will the current drought finally lead to serious climate action?
History isn’t encouraging. The deniers will surely keep on denying,
especially because conceding at this point that the science they’ve
trashed was right all along would be to admit their own culpability for
the looming disaster. And the public is all too likely to lose interest
again the next time the dice comes up white or blue.
But let’s hope that this time is different. For large scale damage
from climate change is no longer a disaster waiting to happen. It’s
happening now.
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