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    The Future

    Page 70
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      66 “Southeast Asia, Southern China and the cassava-growing areas of Southern India”

      Ibid.

      67 “increases in disease spread or incidence with climate warming”

      “Global Warming May Spread Diseases,” CBS News, February 11, 2009, http://​www.​cbsnews.​com/​2100-​205_162-​512920.​html.

      68 spread of diseases like dengue fever, West Nile virus, and others

      Sonia Shah, “The Spread of New Diseases: The Climate Connection,” Yale Environment 360, October 15, 2009; Nicole Heller, “The Climate Connection to Dengue Fever,” Climate Central, May 12, 2010, http://​www.​climatecentral.​org/​blogs/​the-​climate-​connection-​to-​dengue-​fever/.

      69 “hosts and pathogens, the length of the transmission season, and the timing and intensity”

      Union of Concerned Scientists, “Early Warning Signs of Global Warming: Spreading Disease,” http://​www.​ucsusa.​org/​global_​warming/​science_​and_​impacts/​impacts/​early-​warning-​signs-​of-​global-​9.​html.

      70 “epidemics could be characterized by high levels of sickness and death”

      Ibid.

      71 worst outbreak of West Nile virus

      Thomas Maugh, “West Nile Outbreak Worst Ever, CDC Says,” Los Angeles Times, September 5, 2012.

      72 aerial spraying of the city for the first time since 1966

      “Dallas West Nile Virus Outbreak Leads Texas City’s Mayor to Approve Aerial Spraying,” Huffington Post, August 15, 2012.

      73 public safety officials issued an appeal

      “Health Officials: No Need to Call 911 for Mosquito Bites,” CBS DFW, August 24, 2012, http://​dfw.​cbslocal.​com/​2012/​08/​24/​health-​officials-​no-​need-​to-​call-​911-​for-​mosquito-​bites/.

      74 The disease eventually spread

      Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “West Nile Virus,” November 20, 2012, http://​www.​cdc.​gov/​ncidod/​dvbid/​westnile/​index.​htm.

      75 “long-term extreme weather phenomena associated with climate change”

      Paul Epstein, “West Nile Virus and the Climate,” Journal of Urban Health 78 (2001): 367–71.

      76 have been predicting the effects of climate change on West Nile

      Christie Wilcox, “Is Climate to Blame for This Year’s West Nile Outbreak?,” Scientific American, August 22, 2012.

      77 hottest decade ever measured

      NASA GISS, “2009: Second Warmest Year on Record; End of Warmest Decade,” January 21, 2010, http://​www.​giss.​nasa.​gov/​research/​news/​20100121/.

      78 October 2012 was the 332nd month in a row

      National Climatic Data Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, “State of the Climate: Global Analysis, October 2012,” http://​www.​ncdc.​noaa.​gov/​sotc/​global/​2012/​10.

      79 toxins in corn and other crops unable to process nitrogen fertilizer

      “After Drought Blights Crops, US Farmers Face Toxin Threats,” Reuters, August 16, 2012.

      80 a groundbreaking statistical analysis

      James Hansen et al., “Perception of Climate Change,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, August 2012.

      81 on only 0.1 to 0.2 percent of the Earth’s surface

      Ibid.

      82 seasons that are way outside the boundary of the statistical range that used to prevail

      Ibid.

      83 frequency of extremely hot temperatures has gone up dramatically

      Ibid.

      84 temperatures will likely rise by 4 degrees C (7.2 degrees F)

      Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and Climate Analytics, Turn Down the Heat: Why a 4 Degree C Warmer World Must Be Avoided, Report for the World Bank, November 2012, http://​climatechange.​worldbank.​org/​sites/​default/​files/​Turn_​Down_​the_​heat_​Why_​a_​4_​degree_​centrigrade_​warmer_​world_​must_​be_​avoided.​pdf.

      85 “no certainty that adaptation to a 4 degree C world is possible”

      Brad Plumer, “We’re on Pace for 4°C of Global Warming. Here’s Why That Terrifies the World Bank,” Washington Post, November 19, 2012.

      86 “worst case” future projections are the ones most likely to occur

      Brian Vastag, “Warmer Still: Extreme Climate Predictions Appear Most Accurate, Report Says,” Washington Post, November 8, 2012.

      87 49 percent loss

      Joanna Zelman and James Gerken, “Arctic Sea Ice Levels Hit Record Low, Scientists Say We’re ‘Running Out of Time,’ ” Huffington Post, September 19, 2012.

      88 100 percent loss in as little as a decade

      Muyin Wang and James Overland, “A Sea Ice Free Summer Arctic within 30 Years?,” Geophysical Research Letters 36 (2009).

      89 A Chinese ship, the Snow Dragon, traversed the North Pole to Iceland and back

      Jon Viglundson and Alister Doyle, “First Chinese Ship Crosses Arctic Ocean Amid Record Melt,” Reuters, August 17, 2012.

      90 so that computer-driven trades can be executed more quickly

      Christopher Mims, “How Climate Change Is Making the Internet Faster,” Grist, March 29, 2012, http://​grist.​org/​list/​how-​climate-​change-​is-​making-​the-​internet-​faster/.

      91 Arctic Ocean, which until now have been protected by the ice

      Ivan Semeniuk, “Scientists Call for No-Fishing Zone in Arctic Waters,” Nature News Blog, April 23, 2012, http://​blogs.​nature.​com/​news/​2012/​04/​scientists-​call-​for-​no-​fishin-​zone-​in-​arctic-​waters.​html.

      92 movement of military assets into the region

      “Arctic Climate Change Opening Region to New Military Activity,” Associated Press, April 16, 2012.

      93 new drilling opportunities

      “Shell Starts Preparatory Drilling for Offshore Oil Well off Alaska,” CNN, September 9, 2012, http://​articles.​cnn.​com/​2012-​09-​09/​us/​us_arctic-​oil_​1_sea-​ice-​beaufort-​sea-​ice-​data-​center.

      94 consequences of an accidental wellhead blowout

      Jim Kollewe and Terry Macalister, “Arctic Oil Rush Will Ruin Ecosystem, Warns Lloyd’s of London,” Guardian, April 12, 2012.

      95 oil in the Arctic Ocean posed unacceptable ecological risks

      Guy Chazan, “Total Warns Against Oil Drilling in Arctic,” Financial Times, September 25, 2012.

      96 enough sunlight was penetrating to the ocean below

      Kevin Arrigo et al., “Massive Phytoplankton Blooms Under Arctic Sea Ice,” Science, June 15, 2012.

      97 consequences for the location and pattern

      Jennifer Francis and Stephen Vavrus, “Evidence Linking Arctic Amplification to Extreme Weather in Mid-Latitudes,” Geophysical Research Letters 39 (2012).

      98 perhaps beyond

      Petr Chylek et al., “Arctic Air Temperature Change Amplification and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation,” Geophysical Research Letters 36 (2009).

      99 Microbes turn the carbon into CO2 or methane

      Natalia Shakhova et al., “Extensive Methane Venting to the Atmosphere from Sediments of the East Siberian Arctic Shelf,” Science, March 5, 2010.

      100 shallow frozen lakes and ponds surrounding the Arctic

      David Archer, “Methane Hydrate Stability and Anthropogenic Climate Change,” Biogeosciences 4 (2007).

      101 the heat absorption by the water

      Katey Walter Anthony et al., “Geologic Methane Seeps Along Boundaries of Arctic Permafrost Thaw and Melting Glaciers,” Nature Geoscience 5 (June 2012).

      102 outgassing under way that exceeded what they expected

      Shakhova et al., “Extensive Methane Venting to the Atmosphere from Sediments of the East Siberian Arctic Shelf.”

      103 methane underneath the Antarctic ice sheet

      J. L. Wadham et al., “Potential Methane Reservoirs Beneath Antarctica,” Nature, August 2012.

      104 losing mass at an increasing rate

      Eric Rignot et al., “Acceleration of the
    Contribution of the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets to Sea Level Rise,” Geophysical Research Letters 38 (2011).

      105 west Antarctica and Greenland, however, already confirm

      Ibid.

      106 “It shocked the hell out of us”

      Personal conversation with Bob Corell.

      107 doubling time of the observed loss

      James Hansen and Miki Sato, “Paleoclimate Implications for Human-Made Climate Change,” in Climate Change: Inferences from Paleoclimate and Regional Aspects, edited by A. Berger, F. Mesinger, and D. Šijački (New York: Springer, 2012).

      108 “multi-meter” sea level rise in this century

      Ibid.

      109 twenty to thirty feet higher than the present—although it took millennia

      Aradhna Tripati et al., “Coupling of CO2 and Ice Sheet Stability over Major Climate Transitions of the Last 20 Million Years,” Science, December 2009.

      110 50 percent of the world’s population

      “CO2 Emissions to Cause Catastrophic Rise in Sea Levels, Warns Top NASA Climatologist,” Natural News, January 15, 2007.

      111 “In much of the developing world, coastal populations are exploding”

      National Academies, “Coastal Hazards: Highlights of the National Academies Reports,” 2009, http://​www.​ocean​leader​ship.​org/​wp-​content/​uploads/​2009/​08/​OHH.​pdf.

      112 recent study by Deborah Balk

      Gordon McGranahan et al., “The Rising Tide: Assessing the Risks of Climate Change and Human Settlements in Low Coastal Elevation Zones,” Environment and Urbanization 19 (2007).

      113 are already beginning to relocate

      Brian Reed, “Preparing for Sea Level Rise, Islanders Leave Home,” NPR, February 17, 2011.

      114 populations are also at risk in the Philippines and Indonesia

      McGranahan et al., “The Rising Tide.”

      115 The number of climate refugees

      Stern, The Economics of Climate Change.

      116 more than 200 million people

      Neil MacFarquhar, “Refugees Join List of Climate-Change Issues,” New York Times, May 28, 2009.

      117 mega-deltas of South Asia, Southeast Asia, China, and Egypt

      Robert Nicholls, IPCC 2007, “Chapter 6: Coastal and Low-Lying Ecosystems,” 2007, http://​www.​ipcc.​ch/​publications_​and_​data/​ar4/​wg2/​en/​ch6.​html.

      118 many have moved farther north across the border

      Erik German and Solana Pyne, “Disasters Drive Mass Migration to Dhaka,” Global Post, September 8, 2010.

      119 text messaging and email into cities throughout India

      Vikas Bajaj, “Internet Analysts Question India’s Efforts to Stem Panic,” New York Times, August 21, 2012.

      120 stronger cyclones (known as hurricanes in the U.S.) gain energy from warmer seas

      Kerry Emanuel et al., “Hurricanes and Global Warming: Results from Down-scaling IPCC AR4 Simulations,” American Meteorological Society 89 (March 2008): 347–67.

      121 magnified by storm surges that carry the ocean inland

      Claudia Tebaldi et al., “Modeling Sea Level Rise Impacts on Storms Surges Along US Coasts,” Environmental Research Letters 7 (2012).

      122 New York City was put on emergency alert

      James Barron, “With Hurricane Irene Near, 370,000 in New York City Get Evacuation Order,” New York Times, August 26, 2011.

      123 that can be closed to protect the city against such surges

      Steve Connor, “Sea Levels Rising Too Fast for Thames Barrier,” Independent, March 22, 2008.

      124 cities with the highest population at risk from rising seas

      Susan Hanson et al., “A Global Ranking of Port Cities with High Exposure to Climate Extremes,” Climatic Change 104 (December 2010).

      125 cities with the most exposed assets vulnerable to sea level rise

      Ibid.

      126 into areas from which they may once again become climate refugees

      Dizery Salim, United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, “Climate Migrants Risk More Harm in New Surroundings,” 2012, http://​www.​unisdr.​org/​archive/​28113.

      127 are slowly sinking, in a kind of seesaw effect

      Michael Lemonick, “The Secret of Sea Level Rise: It Will Vary Greatly by Region,” March 22, 2010, Yale Environment 360.

      128 for a mixture of complicated reasons

      OurAmazingPlanet Staff, “City of Venice Still Sinking, Study Says,” March 21, 2010, http://​www.​cbsnews.​com/​8301-​205_​162-​57401506/​city-​of-​venice-​still-​sinking-​study-​says/; Forrest Wilder, “That Sinking Feeling,” Texas Observer, November 1, 2007.

      129 between South Carolina and Rhode Island, for example

      Asbury Sallenger, “Hotspot of Accelerated Sea-Level Rise on the Atlantic Coast of North America,” Nature Climate Change 2 (May 2012).

      130 saltwater intrusion into drinking water wells and aquifers

      Cameron McWhirter and Mike Esterl, “Saltwater in Mississippi Taints Drinking Supply,” Wall Street Journal, August 17, 2012.

      131 Approximately 30 percent of human-caused CO2 emissions

      C. L. Sabine et al., “The Oceanic Sink for Anthropogenic CO2,” Science, July 16, 2004.

      132 oceans more acidic than at any time in the last 55 million years

      Andy Ridgwell and Daniela Schmidt, “Past Constraints on the Vulnerability of Marine Calcifiers to Massive Carbon Dioxide Release,” Nature Geoscience 3 (February 2010).

      133 faster than at any time in the last 300 million years

      Bärbel Hönisch et al., “The Geologic Record of Ocean Acidification,” Science, March 2012.

      134 ocean acidification global warming’s “evil twin”

      “Ocean Acidification Is Climate Change’s ‘Equally Evil Twin,’ NOAA Chief Says,” Associated Press, July 12, 2012.

      135 several events in the space of a few years can and do kill the reefs

      K. Frieler et al., “Limiting Global Warming to 2°C Is Unlikely to Save Most Coral Reefs,” Nature Climate Change, September 2012.

      136 one quarter of all ocean species spend

      Elizabeth Kolbert, “The Acid Sea,” National Geographic, April 2011.

      137 in danger of killing almost all of the coral reefs

      David Jolly, “Oceans at Dire Risk, Team of Scientists Warns,” New York Times, Green blog, June 21, 2011, http://​green.​blogs.​nytimes.​com/​2011/​06/​21/​oceans-​are-​at-​dire-​risk-​team-of-​scientists-​warns/.

      138 80 percent of the coral reefs in the Caribbean were lost

      T. Gardner et al., “Long-Term Region-Wide Declines in Caribbean Corals,” Science, July 2003.

      139 same fate threatens reefs in every ocean

      Frieler et al., “Limiting Global Warming to 2°C Is Unlikely to Save Most Coral Reefs.”

      140 Great Barrier Reef corals had died

      Glenn De’ath et al., “The 27-Year Decline of Coral Cover on the Great Barrier Reef and Its Causes,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, October 1, 2012.

      141 a cold container of soda stays more carbonated

      Brian Palmer, “Does Soda Taste Different in a Bottle Than a Can?,” Slate, July 23, 2009, http://​www.​slate.​com/​articles/​news_​and_​politics/​explainer/​2009/​07/​does_​soda_​taste_​different_​in_​a_​bottle_​than_​a_​can.​html.

      142 many of the cold-water reefs may be in even greater danger

      “Oceans and Shallow Seas,” IPCC 2007, http://​www.​ipcc.​ch/​publications_​and_​data/​ar4/​wg2/​en/​ch4s4-​4-​9.​html.

      143 very thin shells that play an important role

      Anthony Richardson, “In Hot Water: Zooplankton and Climate Change,” ICES Journal of Marine Science 65 (March 2008).

      144 Southern California that have been sampled, are actually corrosive

      Richard Feely et al., “Evidence for Upwelling of Corrosive ‘Acidified’ Water onto the Continental Shelf,” Science, June 13
    , 2008.

      145 killing commercially valuable shellfish

      Alan Barton et al., “The Pacific Oyster, Crassostrea gigas, Shows Negative Correlation to Naturally Elevated Carbon Dioxide Levels: Implications for Near-Term Acidification Effects,” Limnology and Oceanography 57, no. 3 (2012): 698–710.

      146 oceans returned to a state comparable

      Kolbert, “The Acid Sea.”

      147 almost a third of all fish species are presently overexploited

      United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, “The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2010,” 2010, http://​www.​fao.​org/​docrep/​013/​i1820e/​i1820e.​pdf.

      148 depletion of up to 90 percent of large fish like tuna, marlin, and cod

      Ransom Myers and Boris Worm, “Rapid Worldwide Depletion of Predatory Fish Communities,” Nature, May 2003.

      149 critical ocean habitats like mangrove forests

      Beth Polidoro et al., “The Loss of Species: Mangrove Extinction Risk and Geographic Areas of Global Concern,” PLoS ONE 5 (2010).

      150 sea grass meadows are also at risk

      Frederick Short et al., “Extinction Risk Assessment of the World’s Seagrass Species,” Biological Conservation 144 (July 2011).

      151 near the mouths of major river systems is doubling every decade

      National Science Foundation, “SOS: Is Climate Change Suffocating Our Seas?,” 2009, http://​www.​nsf.​gov/​news/​special_​reports/​deadzones/​climate​change.​jsp.

      152 large dead zone spreading from the mouth of the Mississippi

      “Good News from the Bad Drought: Gulf ‘Dead Zone’ Smallest in Years,” ScienceDaily, August 23, 2012, http://​www.​sciencedaily.​com/​releases/​2012/​08/​120824​093519.​htm.

      153 “when coupled with current rates of population increase”

      A. Rogers et al., “International Earth System Expert Workshop on Ocean Stresses and Impacts. Summary Report,” IPSO Oxford, 2011, http://​www.​stateof​theocean.​org/​pdfs/​1906_IPSO-​LONG.​pdf.

      154 “We have spent our entire existence adapting”

      Council on Foreign Relations, “The New North American Energy Paradigm: Reshaping the Future,” June 27, 2012.

      155 damaged by extreme downpours and resulting floods and mud slides

      Patrick Rucker and Mica Rosenberg, “Analysis: Storms Damage Budgets in Central America, Mexico,” Reuters, November 12, 2010.

     


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