I wonder how many of us will celebrate the unparallelled
supremacy of arguably the greatest Mum of all: Mother Nature? After all, it's
the matchless Mother Nature that offers such a diverse array of flora and fauna
for us to savour. It's Mother Nature that makes this planet the vibrant yet
intriguing place it is and it's because of her dynamism, that we continue to
discover new fascinating gems of information every day.
It's therefore a shame that, whilst we offer ribbons and
bows to our own mothers, we aren't really giving much of a gift to Mother
Nature. Only this week, in the news, the glaciers of the Canadian Arctic
Archipelago will undergo a dramatic retreat this century if warming projections
hold true. According to the Geophysical
Research Letters journal, "the region's ice fields could lose perhaps
as much as a fifth of their volume." Since 2003, as a result of a warming
world, ice has been "thinning at a rapid rate...at about 70 billion tonnes
and is accelerating." So we return to the heated debate of global warming; pun very much intended here. In my own opinion, and from someone who witnessed first-hand the calamitous effects of a warming planet in Alaska, I ask not what we can do to slow the warming, but just how concerned are we about it. I ask this only because after much delving into my vast collection of National Geographic magazines that this feature regularly returns to, I spot a recurring pattern; decades of disregard, an abandonment of ambition and action, and generally careless negligence on behalf of the world's governments. To back up that latter statement, all I have to do is type one word. Kyoto.
Admittedly, the
degree of success we have had to combat any Global Warming, is heavily
influenced by the technology available and granted, in the seventies, computers
weren't as sophisticated, data loggers weren't as accurate and importantly
humans had to do commit to working out their own interpretations rather than to
rely on a programme. In the November 1976 issue, scientists were even asking:
"Is the world, as a whole, cooling off...or are we instead warming the
atmosphere of our planet irreversibly with our industry, automobiles, and land-clearing
practises?" With such an indeterminate statement, it's perhaps acceptable
that the public couldn't commit to vigorous action; we didn't even know which
direction the mercury was moving in our global thermometer. As the article goes
on later to say, "Man still does not really know what controls and
changes his climate, his daily weather, his seasonal comfort, his year by year
livelihood, and the crucial boundary conditions of life." Despite the
uncertainty, the article points out that "The question of climate change
is no longer just curiosity. We simply cannot afford to arrive unprepared at
the doorstep of climate catastrophe."
But we did, didn't we? Turning to an article I've dug from the May 1998 edition, over twenty years later, the first question posed is "How and why does our climate change?" By 1998, the controversy between a warming or cooling planet was perhaps settled, though the editor adds "the debate will rage as long as the evidence is in any way equivocal." For instance, data from satellites and radiosonde balloons indicated a cooling in the lower atmosphere, but warming near Earth's surface, so once again just like in 1976, it's nearly impossible for any united action.
While scientists explore deep into the complexity, the
public is left in the dark, and recently it has been more of a case of "Is
it too late?" The October 2007 is optimistic in this respect; a
stand-first reads: "Global Warming presents the greatest test humans have
yet faced. New technologies and new habits offer some promise, but only if we
move quickly and decisively." This
glimmer of hope is shadowed somewhat by a gloom of pessimism that casts like a
cloud over the body of the text: "No matter what we do now, the warming
will increase some. That is, we can't stop global warming. Our task is less
inspiring: to contain the damage, to keep things from going out of
control."
The challenge to tackle Climate Change is all but inspiring, and it will mean a committed and active effort by all for any progress to take place. As I draw my last National Geographic from the shelf, from September last year, I am aware that, even this week, plans have been unveiled to introduce Global Warming awareness within computer games. Whilst I have reservations, at least we have accepted the fact that technology can be used for our advantage. But simultaneously, there has to be a 'want' to do it; a genuine will on the behalf of humanity.
As the article from September 2012 concludes "We need
to face up that reality. We don't have to just stand there and take it." And
a warming planet is the last gift Mother Nature wants tomorrow! The challenge to tackle Climate Change is all but inspiring, and it will mean a committed and active effort by all for any progress to take place. As I draw my last National Geographic from the shelf, from September last year, I am aware that, even this week, plans have been unveiled to introduce Global Warming awareness within computer games. Whilst I have reservations, at least we have accepted the fact that technology can be used for our advantage. But simultaneously, there has to be a 'want' to do it; a genuine will on the behalf of humanity.
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