Monday, September 1, 2008

Global Warming: A Global Issue and A Personal One too

Greenland icesheet melting faster

Commentary:

Global Warming had been a big issue since the beginning of the 21st Century, there had been many signs to show the effects of global warming and research had been done to show the root and the cause of global warming, and action was taken to counter the global warming, but it was not effective.

In this article "
Greenland icesheet melting faster", is just another article that emphasizes on global warming, more specifically the cause of the global warming. This article is to warn the citzens of the globe to take action and stop the global warming. We shall talk about the causes and the effects due to global warming, then suggestions could be made to slow down the process of global warming or possibly stop it completely.

There are many causes to global warming. A few examples would be the air pollution that the industries produce, they are the different harmful gases that thickens the ozone layer thus causing more heat to be contained in the Earth's atmosphere, thus leading to global warming.

Although the industries produce a large amount of harmful gases, as long as there are certain things that are able to absorb the hamrful gases, and the only thing or medium that is able to do that is trees generally, ranging from small shrubs that grows in deserts to large trees that grow in rainforests. As long as we have those trees, we would be able to survive even with the constant emission of carbon dioxide. But the trees are being cut down rapidly and there are not enough to replace them.

Those were just the basic causes of global warming, the effects are the extreme to be talked about. Global warming basically causes endangerment of certain species, natural disasters. For example, the polar bear, due to the fact that the globe is rising in temperature, the polar caps starts to melt just like tha article says, then polar bear would have no land to stand on, and since it is a mammal, it would drown in the ocean, thus leading o first endnagerment then extinction.

The above were the causes and effects of global warming, now for the solution of global warming. We could use other sources of energy, like the wind energy or the solar energy. Although they are currently used, they are not a common sight. Thus we can direct ourselves towards alternative sources of enegy. Another solution would be planting more trees. Currently there are many groups of people trying to protect the environment try to prevent people from cutting down the trees by hugging them. We should protect and plant more trees while we have the chance. In these ways, global warming could be slowed down or even stopped completely.

Recently, my group had debated on the topic regarding the poor environmental practies in general around the world. When I chose the topic, i was just thinking about the grades, however as i researched about it, i realise the depth and the seriousness of the global warming, and how important it is to prevent it. Through the interclass debating competition during the english lesson, the impats of global warming had become not only a global issue but also a personal one.

Though young, no matter how small your action might be, it is bound to make a difference to the world. As long as everybody takes part in saving the world and prevent global warming, we could be living in a better place with no air pollution and no extinction of animals.

I conclude by saying that even the slightest act of protection of the environment can always make a difference, and we should start now while we have the chance.

Gobal Warming: A Global Issue

Title of Article: Greenland icesheet melting faster
Author: Unknown
Publisher: The Straits Times
Date the Article was Written: September 1, 2008

The Article

PARIS - SCIENTISTS on Sunday said they could no longer rule out a fast-track melting of the Greenland icesheet - a prospect, once the preserve of doomsayers, that would see much of the world's coastline drowned by rising seas.

The researchers found that the great Laurentide icesheet which smothered much of North America during the last Ice Age melted far swifter than realised, dumping billions of tonnes of water into the ocean.

The discovery raises worrying questions about the future stability of Greenland's icesheet, for the Laurentide melt occurred thanks to a spurt of warming that could be mirrored once more by the end of this century, they said.

'The word 'glacial' used to imply that something was very slow,' said climate researcher Allegra LeGrande of New York's Columbia University.

'This new evidence from the past, paired with our model for predicting future climate, indicates that 'glacial' is anything but slow. Past icesheets responded quickly to a changing climate, hinting at the potential for a similar response in the future.'

Their investigation, published online by the journal Nature Geoscience, centres on a key factor in the climate-change equation.

In February 2007, in the first volume of a landmark report, the Nobel-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicted the oceans would rise by between 18cm and 59cm by 2100.

The increase would depend on temperatures stoked by man-made greenhouse gases. The panel predicted warming of 1.8-4.0 deg C over the century.

But nine months later, in a precis for policymakers, the IPCC scrapped the 59-cm (23.2-inch) upper limit, admitting it did not know enough about meltwater runoff from Antarctic and Greenland, the world's two mighty stores of land ice.

Although scientists are confident Antarctica has so far escaped major damage from global warming, they are far less sure about Greenland, whose icesheet holds enough water to drive up sea levels by 7m.

Seeking help from the past, geologist Anders Carlson at the University of Wisconsin, led a team that delved into sediment left by the Laurentide Icesheet.

At its apogee some 20,000 years ago, the Laurentide was three kilometres (1.9 miles) thick and reached as far south as New York and Ohio today.

Then a big warming occurred, apparently caused by a slight orbital shift which increased radiation that the Earth received from the Sun.

Mr Carlson's team looked for radioactive tags, left by organic debris in the sediment, as a telltale of when the icesheet retreated and vegetation began to sprout once more on the denuded surface.

Using this, they built up a map and a timetable for the Laurentide's retreat and compared this with coral records pointing to Earth's historic sea levels.

They calculate that the Laurentide had two bursts of very fast melting before finally disappearing about 6,500 years ago.

The first phase, around 9,000 years ago, drove up sea levels by around 7m, at 1.3cm each year. The second, around 7,500 years ago, accounted for a rise of 5m at the rate of 1cm annually.

By comparison, sea levels today are rising around 3.3mm every year.

The researchers caution that Greenland is an island bathed in chill water, has a somewhat different geology from that of North America, and so the timetable of the Laurentide's breakup may not exactly apply to it.

Even so, the upper range of the IPCC's temperature estimates at century's end are in line with those of the naturally-induced warming that doomed the Laurentide, they said.

In addition, the Greenland ice sheet is far smaller than the Laurentide and thus lacks frigid bulk to help shield off warming.

'We have never seen an ice sheet retreat significantly or even disappear before, yet this may happen for the Greenland icesheet in the coming centuries to millennia,' said Mr Carlson.

In a commentary, also published in Nature Geoscience, Earth scientists Mark Siddall and Michael Kaplan said Greenland's glacial slab was entering into a temperature range at which it was becoming 'particularly vulnerable.'

' work suggests that future reductions of the Greenland ice sheet on the order of 1m per century are not out of the question,' they said.