I
am a strong believer in the probability/possibility of climate-change. My
counterpart would not be a person who is merely a non-believer in
climate-change. He would be an active denier of what is called AGW, Anthropogenic
Global Warming. Now you know the dividing line.
It
was just coincidence that I read two articles on global warming, one from Scientific American [1] and the other
from The Economist [2]. Both agree,
at least implicitly, that it is no more any good to deny that human beings are
altering the global environment through processes traceable to any species on a
scale that has not happened before. But there ends the similarities. The Scientific American article, authored by
Madhusree Mukerjee (You must read her first book The Naked People, on the tribes of Andaman & Nicobar Islands), tackles
the issue head on: this is what is happening to the climate (charts and all and
reasonably heavy on science terms) and let us see where we will end up.
In
the 1970s MIT developed a climate model called World 3 and it truly is amazing that its predictions as regards
population, industrial output, non-renewable resources and pollution match to a
‘T’ what is being observed.
One
of the researchers on World 3 says
that things will not feel a whole lot different for the next three decades or
so. But then comes, as Ms. Mukerjee springs a metaphor, the Wile E. Coyote
moment – running off a cliff chasing Road Runner, suspended in mid-air for a
brief moment and then … drop, drop and drop and SPLAT!
The
basic reckoning is “the global industrial system has so much inertia that it
cannot readily correct course in response to signals of planetary stress.” That
is, all that external calm will only flatter to deceive. The reckoning would be
swift and serious. Just as Wile E. Coyote could not stop till he splattered
himself on the ground, the environmental “collapse” will have no half-way
house.
OK,
where is the conundrum here, particularly for someone who believes in AGW? Ms.
Mukerjee writes shrill. Her book that introduced me to much about the islands and
its natives was shrill and so is this piece. That in itself is not bad because
as regards the tribes of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, my thick skull needed
to be pierced by a sharp instrument. But, on AGW, I do not need that. I asked
myself, “Who is she writing for?” It could only be for someone who is a
dyed-in-the-wool skeptic. But then, it was way too scientific for the
non-believer. By being shrill she might get the ears of the skeptic but by
being so scientific she would be discouraging them. This was the first conundrum.
The
second conundrum pertains to the article in The
Economist. The newspaper was a strong climate skeptic till about a few
years ago. And, in the current short piece, it takes pot shots with glee at the
travails of Heartland Institute, “the world’s most prominent think-tank
promoting skepticism about man-made climate change [AGW].” The institute is hemorrhaging
funds, after it ran an advertisement in which it put words into the mouth of
the terrorist-cum-mass murderer (by the way, not an Islamist) “Unabomber”, aka Ted
Kaczynski: “I still believe in Global Warming. Do you?” The implication is
anyone who believes in AGW is a terrorist, or at least a potential terrorist.
This did not sit well with PepsiCo (Indra Nooyi), Eli Lily, BB&T bank and a
few other donors, who dropped Heartland Institute mercilessly – Wile E. Coyote
dropping down very fast!
The
article left me with deeply unsettling questions: why this schadenfreude? Why be so cruel to one of its early bedmates? Is the
newspaper currying favor with the AGW crowd and if yes, for what? The Economist is proud of its elitism –
Bill Gates reads it, for example. AGWers do not generally comprise the elitist
crowd. Then, why the transformation? Should I believe that it has had its Road
to Damascus moment? Did the newspaper suddenly become a first generation environmentalist?
Could it be that it thinks there is money in promoting belief in AGW – new technologies,
including the capital intensive geoengineering? Questions, questions and more
questions – third generation conundrum?
The
issue of climate change is very complex and it heavily taxes my brain. I did
not want to add to its burden. But, I like Madhusree Mukerjee’s writing and
also The Economist.
What
can I do? Poor me and my brain.
References
1.
Apocalypse
soon: Has Civilization Passed the Environmental Point of No Return?
Madhusree Mukerjee, Scientific American,
May 23, 2012
2.
Toxic
Shock: A climate-change
sceptic is melting, The Economist, May
26, 2012
2 comments:
the picture of
roadrunner falling
to his demise is very
powerful..but in the story he would get up and run along...not so
the industrial production..
And i don't understand the stand of the economist...
I also did not understand why and how The Economist changed its stripes!
One small observation - it is the Wile E. Coyote that drops, but gets back to chase down its nemesis.
Thanks DS sir.
RE
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