The End of the World

as We Know It

by Jim Redden; www.cinemonkey.com

7/99

For years environmental advocacy groups have been warning that global warming could bring about the end of the world as we know it. Now more objective, less political organizations are beginning to agree that the planet is heating up—threatening all forms of life with hotter, higher oceans and increasingly violent weather. Among other things, temperature-driven climate changes are thought to cause increased occurances of hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, droughts, and other weather-related problems.

On June 23, the Red Cross issued a report stating that the world is headed for a spate of "mega-disasters" caused by a mix of climate changes, environmental damage and population pressures. The forecast was contained in the World Disasters Report 1999, published by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. According to the survey, last year's season of natural disasters was the worst on record, causing more damage than ever before—and that this year will be even worse. "Everyone is aware of the environmental problems of global warming and deforestation on the one hand, and the social problems of increasing poverty and growing shanty towns on the other," said federation president Astrid Heiberg.

Late last year, the London Times reported that major insurance companies are circulating a secret map which shows which areas of the world are threatened by global warming. According to the paper's November 9, 1998 issue, the climate disaster map was compiled by scientists and researchers at Munich Re, one of the world's largest re-insurance companies. Much of it was based on information from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and centers such as the Max Planck Institute. The map couples the impact of various climatic events caused by El Niño with those predicted from more atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. "It shows where there is increased risk on top of all the natural hazards. We are fast approaching the situation where some parts of the world are becoming uninsurable," Dr Julian Salt, a disaster assessment expert with the Loss Prevention Council, told the Times. Areas most at risk include islands in the Caribbean, Indian Ocean and the Pacific, which could be swamped by rising ocean levels. According to the map, the grain-growing lands of the United States could also be harmed by droughts.

The Red Cross report and the Global Warming map confirm that the following studies and incidents should be considered as components of a serious trend:

Some politicians, such as Vice President Al Gore, believe global warming can be stopped by reducing air pollution. That is why they support the international anti-global warming treaty negotiated in Kyoto, Japan, last year. But according to the October 29 issue of USA Today, the treaty isn't going to stop the earth from getting hotter. "The measures in the Kyoto Protocol alone are expected to keep the global temperature only four-tenths of a degree lower than if there were no treaty at all, according to a recent estimate by Tom Wigley of the National Center for Atmospheric Research," the Times reported. "Climate scientists and policy experts say that governments should, at the very least, start thinking harder about how to cope with the havoc global warming would cause."

In fact, the current global warming trend may be part of the earth's normal heating and cooling cycles—cycles which cannot be stopped and which will ultimately destroy much of human civilization. According to a story in the February 16, 1999 issue of The New York Times, there is no such thing as a "normal" climate. Although the earth is currently in the middle of a warming period, more often than not over the last million years it has been locked in the deep cold of ice ages. "Most experts believe the ice will come again, as surely as the earth turns on its axis and revolves around the sun," the paper warned. "It will crush cities, freeze great stretches of northern lands and suck up so much of the world's water that global sea levels will drop by hundreds of feet. In some spots, the Northeast coast will be as much as 100 miles east of where it is now, as it was during the last glaciation. People will survive just as they did then, but the warm, salubrious, all-too-brief interval in which civilazation flourishes will be over. The question is: When?"

Copyright © 1999 by Jim Redden.

Return to Archive Index

Return to Top

Return to Cinemonkey Home Page

Copyright © 1999 D.K.Holm. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium
without express written permission is prohibited.