A Sudden Change of State Posted
July 3, 2007 George Monbiot - The
Guardian
A new paper suggests we have been greatly
underestimating the impacts of climate change – and
the size of the necessary response.
Reading a scientific paper on the train
this weekend, I found, to my amazement, that my hands
were shaking. This has never happened to me before,
but nor have I ever read anything like it. Published
by a team led by James Hansen at Nasa, it suggests
that the grim reports issued by the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change could be absurdly optimistic(1).
The IPCC predicts that sea levels could
rise by as much as 59cm this century(2). Hansen’s
paper argues that the slow melting of ice sheets the
panel expects doesn’t fit the data. The geological
record suggests that ice at the poles does not melt
in a gradual and linear fashion, but flips suddenly
from one state to another. When temperatures increased
to 2-3 degrees above today’s level 3.5 million years
ago, sea levels rose not by 59 centimetres but by
25 metres. The ice responded immediately to changes
in temperature(3).
We now have a pretty good idea of why
ice sheets collapse. The buttresses that prevent them
from sliding into the sea break up; meltwater trickles
down to their base, causing them suddenly to slip;
and pools of water form on the surface, making the
ice darker so that it absorbs more heat. These processes
are already taking place in Greenland and West Antarctica.
Rather than taking thousands of years
to melt, as the IPCC predicts, Hansen and his team
find it “implausible” that the expected warming before
2100 “would permit a West Antarctic ice sheet of present
size to survive even for a century.” As well as drowning
most of the world’s centres of population, a sudden
disintegration could lead to much higher rises in
global temperature, because less ice means less heat
reflected back into space. The new paper suggests
that the temperature could therefore be twice as sensitive
to rising greenhouse gases than the IPCC assumes.
“Civilization developed,” Hansen writes, “during a
period of unusual climate stability, the Holocene,
now almost 12,000 years in duration. That period is
about to end.”(4)
I looked up from the paper, almost expecting
to see crowds stampeding through the streets. I saw
people chatting outside a riverside pub. The other
passengers on the train snoozed over their newspapers
or played on their mobile phones. Unaware of the causes
of our good fortune, blissfully detached from their
likely termination, we drift into catastrophe.
Or we are led there. A good source tells
me that the British government is well aware that
its target for cutting carbon emissions – 60% by 2050
– is too little, too late, but that it will go no
further for one reason: it fears losing the support
of the Confederation of British Industry. Why this
body is allowed to keep holding a gun to our heads
has never been explained, but Gordon Brown has just
appointed Digby Jones, its former director-general,
as a minister in the department responsible for energy
policy. I don’t remember voting for him. There could
be no clearer signal that the public interest is being
drowned by corporate power.
The government’s energy programme, partly
as a result, is characterised by a complete absence
of vision. You can see this most clearly when you
examine its plans for renewables. The EU has set a
target for 20% of all energy in the member states
to come from renewable sources by 2020. This in itself
is pathetic. But the government refuses to adopt it(5):
instead it proposes that 20% of our electricity (just
part of our total energy use) should come from renewable
power by that date. Even this is not a target, just
an “aspiration”, and it is on course to miss it. Worse
still, it has no idea what happens after that. Last
week I asked whether it has commissioned any research
to discover how much more electricity we could generate
from renewable sources. It has not(6).
It’s a critical question, whose answer
– if its results were applied globally – could determine
whether or not the planetary “albedo flip” that Hansen
predicts takes place. There has been remarkably little
investigation of this issue. Until recently I guessed
that the maximum contribution from renewables would
be something like 50%: beyond that point the difficulties
of storing electricity and balancing the grid could
become overwhelming. But three papers now suggest
that we could go much further.
Last year, the German government published
a study of the effects of linking the electricity
networks of all the countries in Europe and connecting
them to North Africa and Iceland with high voltage
direct current cables(7). This would open up a much
greater variety of renewable power sources. Every
country in the network would then be able to rely
on stable and predictable supplies from elsewhere:
hydroelectricity in Scandanavia and the Alps, geothermal
energy in Iceland and vast solar thermal farms in
the Sahara. By spreading the demand across a much
wider network, it suggests that 80% of Europe’s electricity
could be produced from renewable power without any
greater risk of blackouts or flickers.
At about the same time, Mark Barrett
at University College London published a preliminary
study looking mainly at ways of altering the pattern
of demand for electricity to match the variable supply
from wind and waves and tidal power(8). At about twice
the current price, he found that we might be able
to produce as much as 95% of our electricity from
renewable sources without causing interruptions in
the power supply.
Now a new study by the Centre for Alternative
Technology takes this even further(9). It is due to
be published next week, but I have been allowed a
preview. It is remarkable in two respects: it suggests
that by 2027 we could produce 100% of our electricity
without the use of fossil fuels or nuclear power,
and that we could do so while almost tripling its
supply: our heating systems (using electricity to
drive heat pumps) and our transport systems could
be mostly powered by it. It relies on a great expansion
of electricity storage: building new hydroelectric
reservoirs into which water can be pumped when electricity
is abundant, constructing giant vanadium flow batteries
and linking electric cars up to the grid when they
are parked, using their batteries to meet fluctuations
in demand. It contains some optimistic technical assumptions,
but also a very pessimistic one: that the UK relies
entirely on its own energy supplies. If the German
proposal were to be combined with these ideas, we
could begin to see how we might reliably move towards
a world without fossil fuels.
If Hansen is correct, to avert the meltdown
that brings the Holocene to an end we require a response
on this scale: a sort of political “albedo flip”.
The government must immediately commission studies
to discover how much of our energy could be produced
without fossil fuels, set that as its target then
turn the economy round to meet it. But a power shift
like this cannot take place without a power shift
of another kind: we need a government which fears
planetary meltdown more than it fears the CBI.
George Monbiot’s book Heat: how to stop
the planet burning is now published in paperback.
www.monbiot.com
References:
1. James Hansen et al, 2007. Climate
Change and Trace Gases. Philiosophical Transactions
of the Royal Society – A. Vol 365, pp 1925-1954. doi:
10.1098/rsta.2007.2052. http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/docs/2007/2007_Hansen_etal_2.pdf
2. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, February
2007. Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis
– Summary for Policymakers. Table SPM-
3. http://www.ipcc.ch/SPM2feb07.pdf
3. I am grateful to Marc Hudson for drawing my attention
to this paper and giving me a copy.
4. James Hansen et al, ibid.
5. In the Energy White Paper it says
the following: “The 20% renewables target is an ambitious
goal representing a large increase in Member States’
renewables capacity. It will need to be taken forward
in the context of the overall EU greenhouse gas target.
Latest data shows that the current share of renewables
in the UK’s total energy mix is around 2% and for
the EU as a whole around 6%. Projections indicate
that by 2020, on the basis of existing policies, renewables
would contribute around 5% of the UK’s consumption
and are unlikely to exceed 10% of the EU’s.” Department
of Trade and Industry, May 2007. Meeting the Energy
Challenge: A White Paper on Energy, page 23. http://www.dtistats.net/ewp/ewp_full.pdf
6. Emails from David Meechan, press
officer, Renewables, Department for Business, Enterprise
and Regulatory Reform.
7. German Aerospace Center (DLR) Institute
of Technical Thermodynamics Section Systems Analysis
and Technology Assessment, June 2006. Trans-Mediterranean
Interconnection for Concentrating Solar Power. Federal
Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation
and Nuclear Safety, Germany. http://www.dlr.de/tt/Portaldata/41/Resources/dokumente/institut/system/projects/TRANS-CSP_Full_Report_Final.pdf
8. Mark Barrett, April 2006. A Renewable
Electricity System for the UK: A Response to the 2006
Energy Review. UCL Bartlett School Of Graduate Studies
– Complex Built Environment Systems Group. http://www.cbes.ucl.ac.uk/projects/energyreview/Bartlett%20Response%20to%20Energy%20Review%20-%20electricity.pdf
9. Centre for Alternative Technology,
10th July 2007. ZeroCarbonBritain: an alternative
energy strategy. This will be made available at www.zerocarbonbritain.com.
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