2006: The Year of Climate Change
Scientists have agreed for more than a decade that global warming is
real. But public opinion has lagged behind the science. Many say 2006
is the year that the gap has closed.
By ROB DAVIS Voice Staff Writer
Monday, Sept. 18, 2006 | Scientists admit they've been frustrated.
They've
known about global warming since the late 1980s. They've written
hundreds of papers about its causes. Humankind is burning fossil fuels,
producing greenhouse gases that trap more of the sun's energy. And
they've detailed its effects and implications: Warmer oceans. Higher
sea levels. Stronger hurricanes. Skinnier polar bears. More common heat
waves.
The rest of us haven't quite gotten it. A powerful
minority of scientists -- some with financial backing from the fossil
fuel industry -- have characterized the earth's increasing temperature
as part of a natural cycle of warm temperatures.
Within the last
year, public perception of the debate has been changing. Some
scientists and environmentalists say historians will reflect on 2006 as
the seminal year in the debate. The year the Republican governor of
California agreed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The year that
millions saw Al Gore's definitive global warming movie. The year that a
heat wave killed 140 across the state.
Two-thousand-and-six. The moment the tide turned on global warming. The moment we realized: Climate change is real.
Momentum
has been building since last summer, said Tim Barnett, a Scripps
Institution of Oceanography marine physicist and climate specialist. In
July, science advisors from the Group of 8 governments -- the world's
richest countries -- agreed that climate change was a serious problem.
A month later, Hurricane Katrina flattened the Gulf Coast. Even if no
definitive link exists between Katrina and global warming, scientists
say a warmer planet means more severe storms. The year finished as the
warmest on record.
"There's a whole series of just stand-up-and-slap-you-in-the-face events," Barnett said.
Events
like them may ultimately be responsible for the public's acceptance
that climate change is a serious problem. That acceptance starts by
learning that scientists agree on the subject, said Richard Somerville,
a professor of meteorology in the Climate Research Division at Scripps.
"A
lot of people just aren’t up to date with how firm and strong and
united the science is," Somerville said. "There is a genuine scientific
consensus. Yes, there are a few outliers, a few denialists. But that's
true with any area of active science. "
With the choice of a
word -- denialists, not skeptics -- Somerville summed up the change the
public is increasingly accepting. Those who question global warming
aren't skeptical of a theory. They're denying a fact.
His
message has been spreading through the country this year like lightning
across a dark summer sky. Now that the one-time debate over global
warming has ended, journalists are increasingly writing about its local
impacts. The public is growing more aware and more concerned, polls
show. And politicians are beginning to act. San Diego City Attorney
Mike Aguirre released a report on global warming's local implications
in late August. The City Council's natural resources and culture
committee advanced its Climate Protection Action Plan last week.
'It's About Time' Warnings about the earth's climate have come from all directions this year.
Time
magazine's April cover story, featuring a polar bear precariously
floating on thin ice, warned: Be worried. Be very worried. Global
warming, it said, isn't just some vague future problem.
Two
months later came Gore's film, "An Inconvenient Truth." And then the
worst wildfire season since 1960. And news that this summer was the
hottest in 70 years.
By the time the record-setting July heat
wave killed 140 throughout the state, newspaper and television
reporters throughout California were asking: Is this global warming?
Questions
that once were asked only by veteran environmental journalists were now
being posed by a wider media audience. Newspapers from California to
Utah to Vermont have been localizing climate change's implications: How
an expected 1-degree Celcius temperature increase by 2050 will affect
our water supply, our agriculture, our health.
"My feeling is
that it's about time," said Naomi Oreskes, a University of California,
San Diego history professor. "Scientists have not been arguing about
this for several years."
Oreskes authored a 2004 study published
in Science that confirmed the scientific consensus on global warming.
Spurred by what she perceived as a gap between what scientists were
reporting and what journalists and policymakers were saying, she
surveyed nearly 1,000 academic papers on climate change.
They agreed on one important point. The world is getting warmer, and humans are responsible.
Since
the late 1980s, scientists have concurred that the world is warming and
that humans are responsible. But a few scientists and lobbyists from
fossil-fuel industries, who questioned whether the current warming
trend is cyclical, profoundly affected this nation's public policy
debate. While European countries began cutting emissions and producing
more fuel-efficient vehicles, American journalists were criticized for
stifling policy change by overemphasizing a small band of
climate-change deniers.
Max Boykoff, a research fellow at Oxford
University who has studied media bias and its effects on climate change
policy, said anecdotal evidence points to a recent increase both in
coverage and quality.
"My hunch (and hope) is that things are
indeed improving," Boykoff wrote in an e-mail. "I feel though that this
improvement has come primarily through print journalism. ... Local
television attention to it can also be seen as progress. There is a
certain danger here, though, in that newscasters can mistakenly ascribe
a heat wave to global warming, when actually the science cannot explain
things that simply."
Scientists and researchers in San Diego
have been at the forefront of refocusing media and public opinion on
consensus. Oreskes has published her findings in The Washington Post and The Los Angeles Times.
Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UCSD has seen a "tremendous
increase" in media inquiries, said Cindy Clark, Scripps' director of
communication.
Local scientists' efforts have sometimes been proactive. After Somerville met with the editorial board of the Albany (N.Y.) Times Union earlier this month, its editor published a note to readers.
"Just
as we can find people who say AIDS isn't a disease and woman wasn't
created until the sixth day of the world's existence," Editor Rex Smith
wrote, "it's not hard to get comments from people with graduate degrees
who dispute the whole notion of climate change. But there's a point
where such purported balance contributes to a willful ignorance of
what's true."
Bill McKibben, an author and scholar in residence
at Vermont's Middlebury College, wrote in National Geographic in June
that historians will look back on 2006 as the moment when our denial
crumbled about global warming.
"With each passing warm year, and
each new issue of Science and Nature, anyone who follows this
understands that there's no longer an open scientific question,"
McKibben wrote in an e-mail. "Or if there is, the question is: Is this
going to be a lot worse than we thought?"
Climate change science
is becoming profoundly local, McKibben said. The effects are becoming
noticeable regionally -- changes in the maple season in Vermont, shifts
in wildfire frequency and severity in the West. And scientists are more
willing to undertake fine-grained analyses about particular locales,
McKibben said.
"Five years ago, this was still guesswork, but
much less so with each passing year," he said. "And so it's a natural
feature for any editor to order up now."
But just because
consensus has grown doesn't mean the handful of scientists who question
global warming's severity have disappeared. Patrick Michaels, a
University of Virginia professor, said journalists are still calling
him. He still frequently publishes a column in the conservative Washington Times.
"If anything," he wrote in an e-mail, "I am busier than ever!"
While
that may be true, the tenor of the coverage Michaels gets has changed
drastically as reporters and the public have become more aware of
climate change.
A 2004 New York Times story said this:
"Dr. Patrick J. Michaels, a senior fellow in environmental studies at
the Cato Institute, the libertarian research group based in Washington
that is skeptical that global warming will cause serious environmental
harm, points out that carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere had been
higher for 90 million of the last 100 million years."
A 2006 AP
story references him this way: "Pat Michaels -- Virginia's state
climatologist, a University of Virginia professor and senior fellow at
the libertarian Cato Institute -- told Western business leaders last
year that he was running out of money for his analyses of other
scientists' global warming research.
"So last week, a Colorado
utility organized a collection campaign to help him out, raising at
least $150,000 in donations and pledges."
Many now dismiss
Michaels and others as energy industry lobbyists, not scientists. Not
doing so earlier was a mistake, Scripps' Tim Barnett said.
Barnett said scientists knew Michaels and others "were full of crap."
"But
we tended to dismiss them and didn't understand the weight they'd been
carrying. It was a real eye-opener for me," he said. "I think those
guys' days are numbered. They've had their 15 minutes."
One Storm's Effects Journalists
aren't alone in their growing understanding of climate science. A July
poll from the Public Policy Institute of California showed California
residents growing increasingly concerned about global warming; 63
percent of those surveyed believe its effects are already being felt.
Seventy-nine percent of residents surveyed said it is necessary to take
immediate action to counter global warming.
Many say the public
is more aware because of extreme real-life events. Hurricanes and heat
waves. And they're occurring as the public is beginning to understand
the overwhelming body of science that supports climate change.
Many
point to Hurricane Katrina's destruction of the Gulf Coast and New
Orleans -- even if no definitive link exists between specific
hurricanes and global warming. (While some researchers say warming
boosted Katrina's strength, others question the link. But in a warmer
world, research says hurricanes will be fueled by warmer tropical
waters and become more powerful.)
"It wasn't so much during the
hurricane that it dawned on people," says Rick Van Schoik, a professor
of environmental security at San Diego State University. "But over the
last year ... people are starting to realize their own culpability in
the equation."
UCSD's Oreskes said the hurricane clearly played a role in shaping public opinion about climate change.
"It's
something tangible that impacts peoples' lives," she said. "Katrina
woke people up that this is not just going to be a problem that affects
our children and grandchildren."
Others attribute the rising public concern to the growing body of science -- particularly Gore's film, "An Inconvenient Truth."
Mike
Dettinger, a research hydrologist at the U.S. Geological Survey and
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, said he was amazed while watching
the film at the emotional audience reaction as slide after slide
passed. Dettinger heard people groan. Light bulbs were clicking on.
"A
guy like me goes to 'An Inconvenient Truth' and I see a lot of slides I
see at every meeting I go to," Dettinger said. "What 'An Inconvenient
Truth' did was to actually get people to sit for two hours and look at
a slideshow that you can see at any number of scientific meetings."
Last
year's hurricane season, which had the Atlantic churning out named
storms through Christmas, helps the public understand warming's
potential impacts, Dettinger said. The catch, he said, is that this
storm season so far has been unremarkable. Though El Niņo may be
responsible for the break this year, scientists recently reported that
future storm seasons may be more severe. Warmer oceans will fuel
stronger storms.
"Was last year global warming?" Dettinger
asked. "I don't know. It's what we would anticipate global warming
looking like. For it to come now is pretty suspicious, but in no way
conclusive. It was a hell of an analog for it. And it may have even
been a symptom of it."
Political awareness of climate change is
also growing statewide. California, which pioneered anti-acid-rain
initiatives that eventually were adopted nationwide as the Clean Air
Act, has again taken some of the first legislative steps to address
global warming.
While state legislators recently adopted
Assembly Bill 32, legislation that aims to cut the state's carbon
dioxide emissions by 25 percent, the federal government and the Bush
Administration have had little to say about global warming.
But McKibben said the legislation has clear implications for global warming policy across the country.
"Once someone's in the water," he said, "it's psychologically that much easier for others to start jumping in too."
Please contact Rob Davis directly with your thoughts, ideas, personal stories or tips. Or send a letter to the editor.
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