Climate Sirens drop banner on Tower Bridge

Today Cli­mate Siren activists scaled Tow­er Bridge to drop a mas­sive ban­ner above the Par­a­lympic sym­bol which read “Cli­mate Change our Next Chal­lenge”.

Today Cli­mate Siren activists scaled Tow­er Bridge to drop a mas­sive ban­ner above the Par­a­lympic sym­bol which read “Cli­mate Change our Next Chal­lenge”. Their blog con­tains ‘an open let­ter to the world’ (see below) where they ask us all to focus on the “chang­ing cli­mate and the threat it pos­es to our civilisation’s very exis­tence on this beau­ti­ful plan­et” After the drop Tow­er bridge was evac­u­at­ed for “safe­ty rea­sons” the activist arrest­ed and tak­en to Bish­ops­gate where their sup­port­ers fol­lowed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dear Peo­ple of the World,

The 2012 Olympics were a huge inspi­ra­tion as to how we can come togeth­er to over­come chal­lenges and achieve suc­cess – at many lev­els; as par­tic­i­pants, as spec­ta­tors, as com­peti­tors, even as a host nation. No doubt the Par­a­lympics will equal or sur­pass this.

But these Games can be an inspi­ra­tion for us to con­front the biggest chal­lenge our species has ever faced – per­haps will ever face: The chang­ing cli­mate and the threat it pos­es to our civilisation’s very exis­tence on this beau­ti­ful plan­et.

Cli­mate change is hap­pen­ing now. Don’t be fooled by those whose vest­ed inter­ests ensure that they would have you think oth­er­wise. Or by cold­er win­ters. Cli­mate change unfolds uneven­ly over time and is not uni­form across all areas of the globe. Think of the stock mar­ket:

“Any com­pe­tent finan­cial advi­sor will tell you that the road to secure retire­ment is paved with mar­ket drops. Any com­pe­tent cli­mate sci­en­tist will tell you that our road to a hot­ter plan­et will be paved with cold snaps, even record-break­ers.” – Prof. Lau­rence Smith

Even those for­mer­ly scep­ti­cal come round to the irrefutable evi­dence even­tu­al­ly, as Prof. Muller has recent­ly shown. We may not under­stand the phys­i­cal sci­ence of the Earth well enough to accu­rate­ly pre­dict how the cli­mate will change over long peri­ods, par­tic­u­lar­ly at the region­al lev­el, but then we don’t under­stand mete­o­rol­o­gy well enough to deter­mine whether it will be rain­ing or not in Chica­go next 15th April. Doesn’t mean that it will not be rain­ing in Chica­go come 15/04/13!

But our mod­els are get­ting bet­ter. Twen­ty years ago, sci­en­tists had to ‘write-in’ com­plex, irreg­u­lar cli­mate vari­abil­i­ty events such as El Niño/La Niña cyclesNowa­days, they arise spon­ta­neous­ly with­in our mod­els: a clear indi­ca­tor that we are get­ting more and more accu­rate in our pre­dic­tions.

Even with­out the mod­els, the field of pale­o­cli­ma­tol­ogy gives us irrefutable and chill­ing evi­dence of how rapid­ly and enor­mous­ly the glob­al cli­mate can and has changed. Ice cores tell us that around 11,500 years ago, sur­face tem­per­a­ture in Green­land increased by 8.3°C in a sin­gle decade. In the Pliocene, when sea lev­els were 25 metres high­er than they are now, the C02 con­tent of the atmos­phere was just 100 parts per mil­lion (ppm) more than they are now. Our annu­al rate of increase is cur­rent­ly about 2.07ppm and ris­ing.

We are already com­mit­ted to a 0.6°C rise on 1990 lev­els, sim­ply from the long-term warm­ing effects of what we’ve already put in the atmos­phere. Even the IPCC (noto­ri­ous for under­es­ti­mat­ing glob­al cli­mate change to achieve sci­en­tif­ic con­sen­sus) in its most opti­mistic SRES sce­nario – known as ‘B1’ – sees us approach­ing close to a 2°C rise in glob­al tem­per­a­ture by 2100. In this mod­el, norther­ly lat­i­tudes, includ­ing the Arc­tic, would see ris­es any­where between 3.5 – 6°C by century’s end. That might not sound like so much until you realise that the tem­per­a­ture dif­fer­ence between a giant ice sheet cov­er­ing Edin­burgh, Berlin, Moscow and New York was only 5°C low­er than now, dur­ing the last Ice Age. 

The biggest chal­lenge is not in phys­i­cal­ly doing what is nec­es­sary – we have the tech­nol­o­gy and skills to tran­si­tion to a sus­tain­able soci­ety with­out a huge amount of dif­fi­cul­ty. The chal­lenge is in over­com­ing the doubts and con­fu­sion sown by those with vest­ed inter­ests in pre­vent­ing change. To over­come our fears and take that first step into new ter­ri­to­ry. It is the chal­lenge of con­fronting the forces of demog­ra­phy, glob­al­i­sa­tion and cli­mate change and ask­ing seri­ous ques­tions about the way we organ­ise our economies, soci­eties and local com­mu­ni­ties, the way we use our Earth’s nat­ur­al resources, how we dis­trib­ute them and how we pre­serve them for future gen­er­a­tions. 

In truth, our biggest chal­lenge is a moral chal­lenge. 

And we face it now.

clisir