Warming
Reasons Elusive
Still, Scientists Urge
Countries to Act Now
By Robert C. Cowen
The Christian Science Monitor
S
A N F R A N C I S C O, Dec. 14—
Geophysicists are finding that explaining dramatic variations in climate
is a tougher challenge than they first expected. They are warning decisionmakers
not to wait for further scientific evidence before taking action to cope
with possible man-made global warming.
Last year, for example, was
one of the warmest on record and 1998 is fixing to be even hotter, says
the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. While this may
seem like evidence of a man-made climate change, don’t bet on it.
Hindsight shows that much of
last year’s unusual warmth was due to the recent El Niño short-term
climate shift, says climatologist Tim Barnett from Scripps Institution
of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif. Subtract the El Niño effect
and “you’d probably say something different” about that nominally “warmest”
year, he adds. Once again, natural weather changes muddled what seemed
to be a clear global-warming signal.
Maybe
We’ll Never Know
To judge from a meeting here of the American Geophysical
Union, climate researchers are resigned to the fact that they probably
never will be completely certain of human effects on climate.
Nevertheless, there is a growing
consensus that some degree of a man-made climate change may already be
under way. That’s why many experts say that scientific uncertainty is no
longer a reason to delay action to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and
other climate-warming gases. The American Geophysical Union, after much
debate, has prepared an official statement that makes these points.
Concern about the rising sea
level illustrates the situation. The average global sea level has risen
a few millimeters a year throughout this century. Man-made global warming,
theoretically, could accelerate that rate. When the world’s sea level suddenly
rose by 0.8 inches between March and November last year, some environmentalists
thought that man-made acceleration might have kicked in. It was a false
alarm, as R. Steven Nerem explained at the meeting here.
Dr. Nerem is a member of the
science team working with the French/American TOPEX/Poseidon satellite,
which measures average global sea level every 10 days. Nerem says that,
once again, hindsight shows this dramatic sea-level rise was a short-lived
response to El Niño. So too was a 0.7 degree F. rise in sea-surface
temperature between October 1996 and December 1997. Both sea-level and
sea-surface temperature changes have returned to normal levels.
Slow
Changes Mean Hard to Track
Nerem said that detecting sea-level variations, caused
by long-term climate change, will be more difficult than scientists had
anticipated. This is because such changes are significantly smaller than
the dramatic variations than were seen during the short-term El Niño.
He added that, while there are six years of satellite data on hand, “we
really need a decade or more of continuous measurements before we can accurately
detect any climate-induced change.”
Nevertheless, the world’s sea
level continues to rise a few millimeters a year. Experts say that low-lying
islands and coastal regions need to prepare for this rise, regardless of
climate data uncertainties.
Not all of the experts are reticent
in their conclusions. Jonathan Overpeck—who heads the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration’s Paleoclimatology Program in Boulder, Colo.—looks
back over 1,200 years. Because there’s no instrumental record, he examines
sea and lake sediments, glacial ice cores, tree rings, and, where available,
historical documents that yield clues to past climates.
Dr. Overpeck calls global warming
in this century “unprecedented” over that 1,200 year period. He says his
research has failed to find any known natural mechanism that would propel
this warming.
“Twentieth-century global warming
is a reality and should be taken seriously,” Overpeck concluded at the
San Francisco meeting here.
Few of his geophysical colleagues
would put it that bluntly. But few of them also would want their caution
to dissuade nations from treating man-made climate change as a serious
possibility. |