When Ice Sheets Melt

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The Western Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) is part of the continental ice sheet covering West Antarctica on the side of the Trans-antarctic Mountains in the Western Hemisphere. It is bounded by the Ronne Ice Shelf on the North, by the Ross Ice Shelf on the Southeast, and outlet glaciers that drain into the Amundsen Sea on the Southwest. A remnant of the ice age, it is larger than Mexico and makes up 10 percent of the estimated 25.4 million cubic kilometers Antarctic ice sheet. Should it break up due to global warming, which is feared could happen sooner than anticipated, the sea level could rise by 12 feet or more.

The Western Antarctic Ice Sheet is just one region. Ice in other regions could melt too and over time the world’s coastlines will be submerged in water along with many great cities old and new. During a climatic period around 125,000 years ago, the sea level had risen to 20 to 30 feet higher compared to today’s sea level.

For half a century, scientists have been monitoring the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and had assumed that the worst effects of climate change would be realized over a span of hundreds, and even thousands of years. But new research suggests that the ice is melting at a lot faster rate than anticipated. According to a study published on March by the journal, Nature, continued high emissions of greenhouse gases would cause the disintegration of the ice sheets within decades. This would in turn cause the sea level to rise up to 3 feet by the end of this century. Beyond 2100, the situation would grow far worse as the sea could rise more than a pace of a foot per decade by the middle of the 22nd century.

While it might be possible that the actual situation could turn out far less catastrophic than anticipated, the fact that this disaster scenario has been brought to light strongly suggests that if proper measures to decelerate climate change are not put into place and strictly observed, then humanity will suffer immeasurable loss and damage. The melting of sea ice and the consequential rise in sea levels is just but one among many disaster scenarios resulting from climate change.

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2016: Temperatures Rising

The World Meteorological Organization report on March 2016 has confirmed that 2015 was the hottest year on record. The average global temperature was 1.37°F (0.76°C) above the average from 1961-1990. The report is based on data from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the U.K. Met Office, and NASA.

Moreover, NOAA data indicate an unprecedented spike in global carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere with a whopping 3.05 parts per million growth rate. It’s the fourth year in a row that the atmospheric carbon dioxide rose over 2 parts per million.

Another indication of climate change is the depressed sea ice levels. The Artic sea ice has hit a record low winter maximum extent and saw its fourth lowest summer minimum extent. The weather has also reached extremes with some parts of Asia experiencing major heat waves while much of the Pacific had a flurry of storm activity.

But what is perhaps most alarming are further reports that show the startlingly high temperatures has continued well into the first half of 2016 with no signs of a slowdown. Temperatures from April 2015 through June 2016 were record high. NASA’s records show that from January to June 2016 were the warmest respective months in the modern temperature record, which dates to 1880. The worrying data that just keeps getting worse has, in fact, prompted scientists to declare a “climate emergency.” And if the past 14 months is anything to go by, 2016 could well be in the running to beat 2015 as for the hottest year record.

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World leaders and organizations are trying to make progress in addressing the concurrent climate issue and consequential crises like drought, food and water shortages, and deaths. They gathered in record numbers at the United Nations on April 22, 2016, Earth Day, to sign the Paris Agreement, which stipulates that over 195 countries agree to take action, commit to and work together in reducing greenhouse gas emissions to keep global temperature to about 1.5°C and never above 2°C.

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Is the Current Climate Change Man-Made?

Anthropogenic climate change refers to the major warming trend the Earth is currently experiencing due to human activities. The burning of fossil fuels the use of automobiles and machines in factories, the slash and burn practice in agriculture and the use of various chemicals add to the greenhouse gases already present in the atmosphere and those naturally produced on the planet’s surface.

But are we really to blame for the global warming and climate change? Not many really believe that human activities over the last hundred years have caused the surface temperatures to rise. Many anthropogenic climate change skeptics believe that climate change is a natural process.

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Indeed, the planet naturally is capable of causing changes in climate primarily due to how it everything within it reacts to various influences. It is these complex integrated systems and processes that probably made Earth life-sustaining in the first place. Over the last 4.6 billion years the Earth’s climate has undergone several cycles of freezing and melting.  Long before humans ever came to being, the Earth’s climate has changed dramatically due to natural process including the movement of the Earth’s crust, plant and animal respiration, volcanic activities, and solar irradiance.

However, various evidences points that there have been unusual spikes in the emissions of greenhouse gases from the Earth’s surface. That basically means that other than the naturally occurring greenhouse gases, there are other sources. Various data collected by various agencies show that post-industrialization and post-war, there have been a steady rise in greenhouse gas emissions.

According to a report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in 1750 was 280 parts per million (ppm) and has risen up to 379ppm by 2005. In comparison, over the past 8, 000 years and just before 1750, the atmospheric CO2 increased only by 20ppm. Moreover, at the conclusion of the most recent ice age there was an estimated 80ppm increase.

Humanity have been working towards understanding life and the universe and have learned what the Earth’s atmosphere is made up of. Humanity has understood the systems and processes that naturally occur on this planet, humanity now knows how weather becomes and what drive changes in the weather or climate, humanity knows what gases are used and emitted by machines, humanity knows how biology impacts everything else. Humanity knows the implications of human activities on the planet. Will humanity own up to the fact that the current warming trend is caused by the general human population?

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What’s Behind the Current Global Warming Trend?

Considering that the Greenhouse Effect is consequential to life and is essential to how the planet remains habitable, then why has it been positioned in a seemingly bad light? Is it due to the current global warming trend, hastening the progress of climate change?

There is an ongoing debate whether climate change really is happening, and who’s to blame for this. Like with everything else, people just can’t agree and have different views, beliefs and data to prove their point. One set of data that has caused quite a stir reveals how the Earth’s average surface temperature has risen between 0.4 and 0.8 °C over the past 100 years. The increase in temperature has been attributed to human activities. According to scientific data, there has been a sudden and alarmingly consistent rise in carbon dioxide emissions since the 1950s, an era known as the postwar boom.

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Massive gas emissions due to industrialization has largely contributed to the increased levels of carbon dioxide. Add to that the diminishing forests and vegetation that would have greatly helped out in managing the rising levels of carbon dioxide.  The increased level of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases produced by human activities has tipped the balance.

The massive amount of greenhouse gases emitted from the earth’s surface by humans has increased the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, which means that more radiation is being absorbed, retained and emitted by the atmosphere back down to the surface, further increasing the surface temperature.

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Greenhouse Effect, What it Is

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How is it that while our population here on Earth keeps growing and a lot of commotion is going about, other planets are seemingly quiet with no signs of life? So far, we have yet to discover another planet much like ours. Other planets are either scorching hot or freezing cold due to their general makeup and proximity to the sun.

Earth, on the other hand, sits at a comfortable distance from the sun, and it has unique mechanism or process that makes its surface temperature relatively stable and conducive to life- the greenhouse effect. But how is greenhouse effect a good thing when it is causing global warming?

In actuality, warming the planet is why it is helpful. Without the it, Earth will just be another bitterly cold lifeless planet. However, the Greenhous Effect is pretty much getting a bad rep due to the current global warming trend that is causing havoc and alarm in various parts of the globe. But in reality it is with this process that lifeforms exist on Earth.

Solar radiation is a double-edged sword in that it promotes life and at the same time, it can take away life. Living organisms need the suns radiation one way or another, whether directly or indirectly, to survive and proliferate. But large amounts of direct solar radiation is lethal. And this is where greenhouse effect comes in the hero.

Approximately 30 percent of incoming solar radiation that hits the Earth bounces off reflective surfaces like ice, snow, sand, and clouds back to space. The remaining 70 percent is absorbed by the oceans, the land, the atmosphere, plants and other things. A portion of the absorbed energy on the Earth’s surface is eventually released otherwise, the planet would be a boiling casserole. In a nutshell, the Greenhouse Effect is the balancing act between the Earth’s surface and atmosphere in absorbing and radiating the sun’s energy, resulting to a habitable environment.

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What Goes Around Comes Around: Can Civilization Survive Global Warming?

With the unusually warmer climes and extreme weather experienced in various parts of the world today, talks of global warming and climate change commonly come up in conversations, discussions, and debates. But how involved, concerned, or ignorant are we as individuals in this matter?

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Humanity has undoubtedly achieved so much over the past century with industrialization and new technology paving the way for progress by leaps and bounds. But the implications of said progress to this planet we call home seem to have been quite negative, which subsequently could put humanity at risk. Don’t you think?

Based on NASA’s 134-year record, fifteen out of the 16 hottest years took place since year 2000. And just recently, temperatures have spiked in various locations. For instance, Klawock Airport in Southeast Alaska recorded a 21.6 degrees Celsius (71 degrees Fahrenheit) temperature in march 2016, the hottest in the region. Then about 2 months later, temperatures in Phalodi, India shot up to a record breaking 51 degrees Celsius (123.8 degrees Fahrenheit).

The average global temperature has risen at the most rapid rate in recorded history since about 50 years ago. What, with the amount of pollution churned out the world over and to that that reducing coverage of forests and vegetation due commercial and illegal logging, agriculture, urbanization and industrialization, how can Earth possible recover from the current global warming trend?

The questions is, what have we collectively and actively done to prevent or even prepare for the worst case scenario. Are we being realistic and making the necessary measures to safeguard the future of the planet and humanity? According to experts, unless we limit and control global-warming emissions and participate actively in preserving and restoring forest resources, temperatures will continue to rise, which could mean heat waves, extreme weather, drought, flooding, famine and uncountable disasters.

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How Does Global Warming Happen?

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Global warming generally occurs when radiation bouncing off the Earth’s surface gets trapped in the atmosphere. Certain gases in the atmosphere, called greenhouse gases, block most of the heat and radiation bouncing off the Earth’s surface from heading out to space.  So while a fraction of the heat and radiation escapes, those that are absorbed by the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is reflected back down to the Earth’s surface. This process, called “greenhouse effect,” is basically how our planet keeps warm.

The various greenhouse gases differ widely in their properties and behavior, including their ability to absorb, retain, and emit radiation. Though, by far, carbon dioxide is cited as the major contributor for the current global warming trend as it makes up a huge percentage of the greenhouse gases present in the atmosphere. This is because aside from the naturally occurring carbon dioxide, massive amounts of this gas is produced by burning fossil fuels to produce electricity as well as to run machines and factories.

Another greenhouse gas that contribute to global warming is methane. This gas is naturally present below ground and under the sea floor.  And when it is released into the atmosphere, it becomes known as atmospheric methane. It is highly flammable and is used as fuel for ovens, heaters, turbines and many other things. Methane is also produced by certain chemical processes that occur in landfills, agriculture and marine sediments.

Two other greenhouse gases that are contributory to global warming are Nitrous oxide from fertilizers and fluorinated gases which are used for refrigeration and industrial processes.

But while Carbon Dioxide makes up majority of the greenhouse concentration in the atmosphere, Nitrous Oxide is actually 300 times more potent.  Unfortunately, despite the knowledge of how our activities are greatly affecting climate change, not much has been done to rectify the problem due to varied interests and concerns of the planet’s general population. So, will the time for a collective effort to combat global warming and preventive measures to abate the possible demise of humanity ever come to fruition?

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