Silent
Majority Speaks
Rescuing
Democracy in the United Kingdom from our current Elected
Dictatorship
|
Spin, not
face-to-face confrontations with the voters, is the Government's
chosen method of communication. Ordinary
people are dangerous. Ordinary people might ask a question
which throws a politician 'off message'; the Cabinet member
might reveal himself or herself to be a human being like
us, and not a programmed android. Worse still, he or she
might tell the truth.
Ann Leslie - Daily Mail, September
16, 2004
|
Nuclear
Power is the only green solution
by
James Lovelock, The Independent, May 24, 2004
Sir
David King, the Government's chief scientist, was far-sighted to
say that global warming is a more serious threat than terrorism.
He may even have underestimated, because, since he spoke new evidence
of climate change suggests it could be even more serious, and the
greatest danger that civilisation has faced so far.
Most
of us are aware of some degree of warming; winters are warmer and
spring comes earlier. But in the Arctic, warming is more than twice
as great as here in Europe and in summertime, torrents of melt water
now plunge from Greenland's kilometre-high glaciers. The complete
dissolution of Greenland's icy mountains will take time, but by
then the sea will have risen seven metres, enough to make uninhabitable
all of the low lying coastal cities of the world, including London,
Venice, Calcutta, New York and Tokyo. Even a two metre rise is enough
to put most of southern Florida under water.
The
floating ice of the Arctic Ocean is even more vulnerable to warming;
in 30 years its white reflecting ice, the area of the US, may become
dark sea that absorbs the warmth of summer sunlight, and further
hastens the end of the Greenland ice. The North Pole, goal of so
many explorers, will then be no more than a point on the ocean surface.
Not
only the Arctic is changing; climatologists warn that a four-degree
rise in temperature is enough to eliminate the vast Amazon forests
in a catastrophe for their people; their biodiversity and for the
world, which would lose one of its great natural air conditioners.
The
scientists who form the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change
reported in 2001 that global temperature would rise between two
and six degrees Celsius by 2100. Their grim forecast was made perceptible
by last summer's excessive heat; and according to Swiss meteorologists,
the Europe-wide hot spell that killed over 20,000 was wholly different
from any previous heat wave. The odds against it being a mere deviation
from the norm were 300,000 to one. It was a warning of worse to
come.
What
makes global warming so serious and so urgent is that the great
Earth system, Gaia, is trapped in a vicious circle of positive feedback.
Extra heat from any source, whether from green-house gases, the
disappearance of Arctic ice or theAmazon forest, is amplified, and
its effects are more than additive. It is almost as if we had lit
a fire to keep warm, and failed to notice, as we piled on fuel,
that the fire was out of control and the furniture had ignited.
When that happens, little time is left to put out the fire before
it consumes the house. Global warming, like a fire, is accelerating
and almost no time is left to act.
So what
should we do? We can just continue to enjoy a 21st century while
it last, and make cosmetic attempts, such as the Kyoto Treaty, to
hide the political embarrassment of global warming, and this is
what I fear will happen in much of the world. When, in the 18th
century, only one billion people lived on Earth, their impact was
small enough for it not to matter what energy source they used.
But with six billion, and growing, few options remain; we cannot
continue drawing energy from fossil fuels and there is no chance
that the renewables, wind, tide and water power can provide enough
energy and in time. If we had 50 years; Earth is already so disabled
by the insidious poison of greenhouse gases that even if we stop
all fossil fuel burning immediately, the consequences of what we
have already done will last for 1000 yars. Every year that we go
on burning carbon makes it worse for our descendants and for civilisation.
Worse
still, if we burn crops grown for fuel this could hasten our decline.
Agriculture already uses too much of the land needed by the Earth
to regulate its climate and chemistry. A car consumes 10 to 30 times
as much carbon as its driver; imagine the extra farmland required
to feed the appetite for cars.
By all
means, let us use the small input from renewables sensibly,but only
one immediately available source does not cause global warming and
that is nuclear energy. True, burning natural gas instead of coal
or oil releases only half as much carbon dioxide, but unburnt gas
is 25 times as potent a greenhouse agent as its carbon dioxide.
Even a small leakage would neutralise the advantage of gas.
The
prospects are grim, and even if we act successfully in amelioration,
there will still be hard times, as in war, that will stretch our
grandchildren to the limit. We are tough and it would take more
than the climate catastrophe to eliminate all breeding pairs of
humans; what is at risk is civilisation. As individual animals we
are not so special, and in some ways are like a planetary disease,
but through civilisation we redeem ourselves and become a precious
asset for the Earth; not least because through our eyes the Earth
has seen herself in all her glory.
There
is a chance we may be saved by an unexpected event such as a series
of volcanic eruptions severe enough to block out sunlight and so
cool Earth But only losers would bet their lives on such poor odds.
Whatever doubts there are about future climates, there are no doubts
that both greenhouse gases and temperatures are rising.
We have
stayed in ignorance for many reasons; important among them is the
dential of climate change in the US where governments have failed
to give their climate scientists the support they need. The Green
lobbies, which should give priority to global warming, seem more
concerned about threats to people than with threats to the Earth,
not noticing that we are part of the Earth, wholly dependent upon
its well being. It may take a disaster worse than last summer's
European deaths to wake us up.
Opposition
to nuclear energy is based on irrational fear fed by Hollywood-stype
fiction, Green lobbies and the media. These fears are unjustified,
and nuclear energy from its start in 1952 has proved to be the safest
of all energy sources. We must stop fretting over the minute statistical
risks of cancer from chemicals or radiation. Nearly one third of
us will die of cancer anyway, mainly because we breathe air laden
with that all pervasive carcinogen, Oxygen. If we fail to concentrate
our minds on the real danger, which is global warming, we may die
even sooner, as did more than 20,000 unfortunates from over-heating
in Europe last summer.
I find
it sad and ironic that the UK, which leads the world in the quality
of its Earth and climate scientists, rejects their warnings and
advice, and prefers to listen to the Greens. But I am a Green and
I entreat my friends in the movement to drop their wrong-headed
objection to nuclear energy.
Even
if they were right about its dangers, and they are not, its worldwide
use as our main source of energy would pose an insignificant threat
compared with the dangers of intolerable and lethal heat waves and
sea levels rising to drown every coastal city of the world. We have
no time to experiment with visionary energy sources; civilisation
is in imminent danger and has to use nuclear - the one safe, available,
energy source - now or sufer the pain soon to be inflicted by our
outraged planet.
If you
have suggestions for additional subjects, or material to include
in the pages linked to the subjects listed, please contact
the webmaster.
|