By CHARLES J. HANLEY, AP Special Correspondent Charles J. Hanley, Ap Special
Correspondent 2 hrs 28 mins ago
NEW YORK Floods, fires, melting ice and feverish heat: From smoke-choked
Moscow to water-soaked Iowa and the High Arctic, the planet seems to be having
a midsummer breakdown. It's not just a portent of things to come, scientists
say, but a sign of troubling climate change already under way.
The weather-related cataclysms of July and August fit patterns predicted by
climate scientists, the Geneva-based World Meteorological Organization says
although those scientists always shy from tying individual disasters directly
to global warming.
The experts now see an urgent need for better ways to forecast extreme events
like Russia's heat wave and wildfires and the record deluge devastating
Pakistan. They'll discuss such tools in meetings this month and next in Europe
and America, under United Nations, U.S. and British government sponsorship.
"There is no time to waste," because societies must be equipped to deal with
global warming, says British government climatologist Peter Stott.
He said modelers of climate systems are "very keen" to develop supercomputer
modeling that would enable more detailed linking of cause and effect as a
warming world shifts jet streams and other atmospheric currents. Those changes
can wreak weather havoc.
The U.N.'s network of climate scientists the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) has long predicted that rising global temperatures
would produce more frequent and intense heat waves, and more intense rainfalls.
In its latest assessment, in 2007, the Nobel Prize-winning panel went beyond
that. It said these trends "have already been observed," in an increase in heat
waves since 1950, for example.
Still, climatologists generally refrain from blaming warming for this drought
or that flood, since so many other factors also affect the day's weather.
Stott and NASA's Gavin Schmidt, at the Goddard Institute of Space Studies in
New York, said it's better to think in terms of odds: Warming might double the
chances for heat waves, for example. "That is exactly what's happening,"
Schmidt said, "a lot more warm extremes and less cold extremes."
The WMO pointed out that this summer's events fit the international scientists'
projections of "more frequent and more intense extreme weather events due to
global warming."
In fact, in key cases they're a perfect fit:
RUSSIA
It's been the hottest summer ever recorded in Russia, with Moscow temperatures
topping 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8 degrees C) for the first time. Russia's
drought has sparked hundreds of wildfires in forests and dried peat bogs,
blanketing Moscow with a toxic smog that finally lifted Thursday after six
days. The Russian capital's death rate doubled to 700 people a day at one
point. The drought reduced the wheat harvest by more than one-third.
The 2007 IPCC report predicted a doubling of disastrous droughts in Russia this
century and cited studies foreseeing catastrophic fires during dry years. It
also said Russia would suffer large crop losses.
PAKISTAN
The heaviest monsoon rains on record 12 inches (300 millimeters) in one
36-hour period have sent rivers rampaging over huge swaths of countryside,
flooding thousands of villages. It has left 14 million Pakistanis homeless or
otherwise affected, and killed 1,500. The government calls it the worst natural
disaster in the nation's history.
A warmer atmosphere can hold and discharge more water. The 2007 IPCC report
said rains have grown heavier for 40 years over north Pakistan and predicted
greater flooding this century in south Asia's monsoon region.
CHINA
China is witnessing its worst floods in decades, the WMO says, particularly in
the northwest province of Gansu. There, floods and landslides last weekend
killed at least 1,100 people and left more than 600 missing, feared swept away
or buried beneath mud and debris.
The IPCC reported in 2007 that rains had increased in northwest China by up to
33 percent since 1961, and floods nationwide had increased sevenfold since the
1950s. It predicted still more frequent flooding this century.
UNITED STATES
In Iowa, soaked by its wettest 36-month period in 127 years of recordkeeping,
floodwaters from three nights of rain this week forced hundreds from their
homes and killed a 16-year-old girl.
The international climate panel projected increased U.S. precipitation this
century except for the Southwest and more extreme rain events causing
flooding.
ARCTIC
Researchers last week spotted a 100-square-mile (260-square-kilometer) chunk of
ice calved off from the great Petermann Glacier in Greenland's far northwest.
It was the most massive ice island to break away in the Arctic in a
half-century of observation.
The huge iceberg appeared just five months after an international scientific
team published a report saying ice loss from the Greenland ice sheet is
expanding up its northwest coast from the south.
Changes in the ice sheet "are happening fast, and we are definitely losing more
ice mass than we had anticipated," said one of the scientists, NASA's Isabella
Velicogna.
In the Arctic Ocean itself, the summer melt of the vast ice cap has reached
unprecedented proportions in recent years. Satellite data show the ocean area
covered by ice last month was the second-lowest ever recorded for July.
The melting of land ice into the oceans is causing about 60 percent of the
accelerating rise in sea levels worldwide, with thermal expansion from warming
waters causing the rest. The WMO'S World Climate Research Program says seas are
rising by 1.34 inches (34 millimeters) per decade, about twice the 20th
century's average.
Worldwide temperature readings, meanwhile, show that this January-June was the
hottest first half of a year since recordkeeping began in the mid-19th century.
Meteorologists say 17 nations have recorded all-time-high temperatures in 2010,
more than in any other year.
Scientists blame the warming on carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases
pouring into the atmosphere from power plants, cars and trucks, furnaces and
other fossil fuel-burning industrial and residential sources.
Experts are growing ever more vocal in urging sharp cutbacks in emissions, to
protect the climate that has nurtured modern civilization.
"Reducing emissions is something everyone is capable of," Nanjing-based
climatologist Tao Li told an academic journal in China, now the world's No. 1
emitter, ahead of the U.S.
But not everyone is willing to act.
The U.S. remains the only major industrialized nation not to have legislated
caps on carbon emissions, after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid last week
withdrew climate legislation in the face of resistance from Republicans and
some Democrats.
The U.S. inaction, dating back to the 1990s, is a key reason global talks have
bogged down for a pact to succeed the expiring Kyoto Protocol. That is the
relatively weak accord on emissions cuts adhered to by all other industrialized
states.
Governments around the world, especially in poorer nations that will be
hard-hit, are scrambling to find ways and money to adapt to shifts in climate
and rising seas.
The meetings of climatologists in the coming weeks in Paris, Britain and
Colorado will be one step toward adaptation, seeking ways to identify trends in
extreme events and better means of forecasting them.
A U.N. specialist in natural disasters says much more needs to be done.
Salvano Briceno of the U.N.'s International Strategy for Disaster Reduction
pointed to aggravating factors in the latest climate catastrophes: China's
failure to stem deforestation, contributing to its deadly mudslides; Russia's
poor forest management, feeding fires; and the settling of poor Pakistanis on
flood plains and dry riverbeds in the densely populated country, squatters'
turf that suddenly turned into torrents.
"The IPCC has already identified the influence of climate change in these
disasters. That's clear," Briceno said. "But the main trend we need to look at
is increasing vulnerability, the fact we have more people living in the wrong
places, doing the wrong things."
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AP Correspondents Michael J. Crumb in Des Moines, Iowa, and Christopher Bodeen
in Beijing contributed to this report.