And you tell me over and over and over again, my friend
Ah, you don’t believe we’re on the eve of destruction
“Eve of Destruction,” P.F. Sloan, 1964
In these months after our withdrawal from Afghanistan, U.S. citizens may feel remote from foreign wars. But we should be far from sanguine. The world is filled with tense and nasty spots, which are only likely to fester with agricultural failures and depletion of freshwater from climate change. Think of India vs. Pakistan, Israel vs. Iran, and the two Koreas. Any of these long-standing animosities could flare up in an instant, and most of the players have access to nuclear weapons.
We may feel smug that we are not on the list, but it is unlikely that we can avoid participation if one of our long-time allies is in danger. Moreover, even a regional and limited nuclear exchange becomes a global problem through its effects on the atmosphere. The global transport of radioactivity from nuclear tests and from the Chernobyl meltdown is well documented. In the face of a limited exchange of nuclear weapons, it is only wishful thinking that we might avoid the health consequences of higher levels of radiation transported through the atmosphere.
Moreover, nearly 30 years ago, a prominent group of atmospheric scientists published a paper in Science cataloging the development of global wintertime conditions from the use of nuclear weapons in a massive exchange between the U.S. and (then) the Soviet Union. Mercifully, this has led to a reduction in warheads by these two superpowers, although plenty remain.
What concerns me here is the more likely probability a limited of exchange nuclear detonations in a regional hotspot. Toon et al. (2019) examined the potential impacts of such a conflict using a sophisticated model of atmospheric dynamics. Their results are sobering. For instance, a limited exchange between India and Pakistan is likely to inject black carbon into the stratosphere, reducing the sunlight on the Earth’s surface by 20 to 35% and global temperature by about 2 to 5 C for a decade. Although less certain, rainfall is projected to decrease 15 to 30%. Losses of the protective ozone layer from the stratosphere would subject the Earth’s surface to a 30 to 80% increase in ultraviolet radiation. The combined effects of lower temperatures and higher ultraviolet flux would reduce the productivity of the Earth’s land vegetation by 15 to 30% for 25 years. Such changes in plant growth are unthinkable in a world that already struggles to feed a population rising beyond 9 billion.
This is not the time to bask in isolationism. The circulation and behavior of the atmosphere connect our world, ensuring that what happens anywhere on Earth is felt everywhere. This pertains to rising emissions of carbon dioxide and catastrophic emissions of radiation and nuclear ash. It behooves peaceful nations of the world and all the people who live in them to encourage and participate in global governance to ensure our future.
NB This piece was originally inspired by a suggestion from Steve Hamilton (Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies)
References
Mills, M.J., O.B. Toon, J. Lee-Taylor and A. Robock. 2014. Multidecadal global cooling and unprecedented ozone loss following a regional nuclear conflict. Earth’s Future 2: doi: 10.1002/2013EF000205
Toon, O.B. and 9 others. 2019. Rapidly expanding nuclear arsenals in Pakistan and India portend regional and global catastrophe. Science Advances doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aay5478.
Turco, R.P., O.B. Toon, T.P. Ackerman, J.B. Pollack and C. Sagan. 1983. Nuclear winter: global consequences of multiple nuclear explosions. Science 222: 1283-1292.
Nuclear winter. That’s our fault. But what are the odds that we have a volcanic ash winter from one or more monster volcanic explosions first? With over a 1000 active volcanoes, and a few new underwater ones, not to mention La Palma finally erupting, is anyone measuring the co2 and so2 in the air and the oceans from these natural outpourings? If so, what is their impact on current global warming. Are we in a ‘relatively ‘ new active volcanic cycle? Could this cycle become the limiting factor on Earth for Humans? Lastly, it seems to me that we humans have a preternatural penchant for believing that the Earth is stable and that we are the only perturbation in its geological, climatilogolical, and astro-physical life. The more that I learn of this planet, the more that I see that nothing is stable, that stability is an illusion or a mental fabrication of the typical human mind that craves certainty and predictability.
“God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.”