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Guest Column| Defending The Science That Explains Climate Change

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Editor's note: Adam Markham, director of climate impacts for the Union of Concerned Scientists' Climate and Energy Program and a co-author of the report “National Landmarks at Risk," has written the following rebuttal to Dr. Daniel B. Botkin's column on climate change and his thoughts on what is, and isn't, driving it.

My colleagues and I wanted to respond to a recent column by Dr. Daniel Botkin that criticized a report we wrote regarding the threats climate change poses to historic places and landmarks in the United States.

Dr. Botkin challenged the basic science on which we based our report, yet in February 2014, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and the UK Royal Society released a joint publication in which they stated: “Scientists know that recent climate change is largely caused by human activities from an understanding of basic physics, comparing observations with models, and fingerprinting the basic patterns of climate change caused by different human and natural influences.”

While Dr. Botkin rightly notes that sea level rise has been a problem for a long time, he doesn’t acknowledge that the rate of sea level rise is increasing as the ocean expands and glaciers and ice sheets melt due to global warming. Sea level is projected to continue increasing, threatening nearly all coastal areas. The future rate of change depends on how much heat-trapping emissions we release into the atmosphere.

Dr. Botkin also points to hurricane landfall statistics to dismiss our conclusions about flooding at historic sites. But all storms, not just hurricanes, are made more destructive by higher seas. Some of the sites we examined, in fact, are at risk of flooding, or already experiencing it, during regular high tides because sea levels are rising. Downtown Annapolis, for instance, is expected to see 200 tidal floods a year by 2030.

In the report, we also point to the problem of coastal erosion, which can be exacerbated by higher water levels even if storm frequencies remain the same. For instance, in Alaska warming has caused the loss of the seasonal sea ice that used to protect the coast from erosion in winter storms. As a consequence, native villages such as Kivalina and Shishmaref will have to relocate to protect their residents, and archaeological sites that are more than 4,000 years old are being washed away.

Dr. Botkin also cited national fire statistics in his critique. While wildfires occur all over the United States, they are most prevalent in the U.S. West, where they have been increasing as the climate has warmed. While the Western wildfire season lasted about 5 months in the 1970s, it has now expanded to 7 months. Hotter and drier conditions in the U.S. West, along with shorter winters and lowered snowpack, are helping create the conditions that lead to larger fires. The scientific evidence is clear that climatic conditions are the primary factor driving changes in fire activity in the region. In our report, we focused on Western sites that face substantial risks from large and intense wildfires.

Archaeologists at globally important sites including Bandelier National Monument and Mesa Verde National Park have expressed deep concern about the impacts of larger fires and extreme rainfall events on thousands of ancient Pueblo sites.

Let’s also clear up how we wrote our report. The report was drafted by UCS staff, including a scientist who has been studying climate change for years. We carried out extensive literature reviews for each of the sites highlighted, drawing on the latest peer-reviewed publications and technical reports. In the process, we also interviewed many site managers and field scientists familiar with the sites about which we wrote. The final text and case studies were then reviewed by more climate scientists, archaeologists, historians and, indeed, many of the men and women who manage and preserve the historic sites we highlighted as vulnerable to the effects of climate change. (As an aside, Dr. Botkin erroneously described my colleague Kate Cell, a senior outreach coordinator at UCS as a fundraiser. In addition to other excellent work she did on the report, Ms. Cell also helped organize this exhaustive review process.)

The people in charge of these sites are, in many cases, already dealing with climate change. To cite one example, NASA is contemplating a ‘planned retreat’ from sea-level rise and land subsidence at Wallops Island in Virginia, where some of the nation’s early experiments in rocketry took place. Major efforts are also underway to protect the shoreline at the original colonial settlement site at Jamestown, Virginia due to erosion and flooding exacerbated by rising water levels.

Further, the National Park Service runs a climate change response program and has adopted an ambitious climate change action plan. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell who has traveled widely in the national parks since she was appointed has said “everywhere I’ve gone the impact of climate change has been very evident”  With regard to historic sites, a recent policy memo from National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis stated “Climate change poses an especially acute problem for managing cultural resources because they are unique and irreplaceable -- once lost they are lost forever”.

The parks themselves are also a rich source of information about our changing climate. As one study by National Park Service climate scientist, Patrick Gonzalez noted, “Field measurements in national parks have detected glacial melt, decreased snowfall and snowpack, earlier spring warmth and streamflow, sea-level rise, increased conifer mortality, and shifts of vegetation biomes, small-mammal ranges, and winter bird ranges. Analyses attribute these impacts to climate change.”

Ultimately, Dr. Botkin’s column was less about our report and more of a criticism of the science used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), one of the authoritative climate science assessments upon which we relied.

The IPCC is the largest scientific assessment body in the world. Its reports are commissioned by the United Nations and the World Meteorological Organisation, written by scientists, scrutinized through an exhaustive public comment process, and approved by member countries.

We used many other sources in addition to the IPCC, including the National Climate Assessment. Published in May 2014, it is the most comprehensive review of climate science ever carried out for the United States. It concluded that “global climate is changing and this change is apparent across a wide range of observations. The global warming of the past 50 years is primarily due to human activities.”

The National Climate Assessment is produced by an independent advisory committee and finalized by more than a dozen federal science agencies, including the Department of the Interior, which houses the National Park Service. Its reports are authorized by Congress, open to public comment, and are considered the definitive guide to climate change in the United States.

Dr. Botkin is right to assert that climate change is not the only concern at the parks or sites we wrote about in our report. But it is happening and it makes many of the problems parks are already dealing with – including wildfires and flooding – worse than they would be otherwise.

Thankfully, the people in charge of these sites are paying close attention to the science. They are seeking to reduce climate risk and planning for long-term resilience because these sites are part of our heritage. These men and women are stewards, and they want to enable our children and grandchildren to enjoy these sites, even as the climate changes rapidly around us.

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Comments

Two things -- first, even if climate change is largely due to natural causes that cannot be controlled by man, human activities undoubtedly exacerbate those things.  More careful management of human activities will at least help reduce negative effects.

Second, from a geologic standpoint, the amount of deposition in oceans resulting from erosion of continental landmasses, while significant, is miniscule when compared to the volume of water melting from glacial ice worldwide.

http://www.skepticalscience.com/sea-level-rise.htm

 

Here is an excellent article that explores a numer of reasons for rising oceans.

www.usc.edu/org/.../Issealevelrising.pdf

 

Hmmmm.  I can't get that link to work, but found that if you go to the USC website and then search for sea level, you will find the article listed along with a number of others.  Here is the link to USC:

www.usc.edu/org/


Thanks, Lee.

Myself, I'm not so sure how minuscule deposition is as a  factor considering the view of just one drainage, the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon.  All that has disappeared finding its resting place in the Sea of Cortez.  All other events that either displace their volume or in floating objects , weight.   As much as we all want to believe something as absolute and that we have the ability to change outcomes with our intelligence alone, lots of evidence would suggest otherwise.  


I hope you were able to find the article referenced above.  It points out that there are a very large number of variables involved in rising sea levels.  Sedimentation is one, but probably plays a smaller role than we might expect.


Regarding sea level rise I have traveled 1000's of miles in arctic Canada, some of it on coastlines where the land has been rising since the ice sheets melted. In one location I have photos of 900 feet of isostatic rebound as it is called. Every few decades or so a big storm would leave a new beach line and seperate terraces in loose rock. That mass of rebound on a continental scale must have had wide spread effects on sea levels aside from that caused by the melting glaciers.


EC, I have been thinking about your post, and in the geologic time scale I think you are correct, but in our lifetimes, peoples actions make a huge difference in my own view. The debate does rage on about the human contribution to climate change and from what I generally read and see, there is much to support the claims of those asking all of us to think about it. That issue aside, the effects of air pollution, pesticide pollution, industrial pollution including gases generated by drilling, fracking, the manufacturing and disposal of the waste, and the list goes on, are serious issues that affect the lives of millions people. The actions we take may or may not decide the climate warming debate, but they certainly will enhance the quality of life of a vast number of human beings including the offspring of many of us.  


Rmackie,

I don't (and never have) denied that we humans can have an impact.  Though Lee insists there are people that believe that, he can't seem to produce a name.  There certainly are forms of "pollution" which should be minimized.  But for many (not all) of the ones you mentioned, we have already reduced dramatically and the incremental reductions that can be made are insignificant relative to the costs.  In some cases we can make improvements with our actions - but talking the Chinese into it may be more difficult.

I don't believe that the actions we take relative to climate warming will "enhance the quality of life".  In fact I believe that not only will they be ineffective but will in fact hurt our quality of life. 


We live in very interesting times. From the Alaska Dispatch website. "Dan White, director of the Institute of Northern Engineering at UAF, warned there is enough gas bubbling up under the ice of some Arctic lakes in winter that one must be careful not to hurt oneself when lighting the gas.The Arctic methane, Wadhams said, "could cause a large amount of warming in a short time."Igor Semiletov, a professor at the International Arctic Research Center at UAF, estimates there might be 500 times as much methane trapped beneath the Arctic as there is currently in the atmosphere.If a lot of it got loose fast, the planet could really heat up."


EC, I guess it all depends on how you define "quality of life".  

I for one would like to see collective positive efforts made to reduce our society's overall ecological footprint.  Climate Change has indeed been accelerated by human activities, mostly related to the consumption of fossile fuels.  

As a non-scientist, you seem to doubt this, but a reasonable review of the perponderance of evidence, including the conclusions presented by a solid majority of scientific articles on this important topic, will demonstrate that you are on the wrong side of a debate that is actually moribund and no longer active within the scientific community.

Unfortunately repetitive mis-interpretation and mis-representation of vast amounts of climate change data and outright rejection of credible climate model projections somehow gets published and repeated over and over again in the non-scientific news media, which as Climate Change denier propaganda, gives the misleading impression to an otherwise uninformed reader that the link between human activities and accelerated climate change is still very much in question.  

More on this to come in the near future......


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