During Tuesday night's Republican debate, Rand Paul delivered what has always been, to my mind, one of the strangest climate denialistskeptic doubter talking points. Here he is:
While I do think man may have a role in our climate, I think nature
also has a role. The planet's 4.5 billion years old. We've been through
geologic age through geologic age. We've had times when the
temperature’s been warmer, we’ve had times when the temperature’s been
colder, we’ve had times when the carbon in the atmosphere has been
higher.
Paul deserves credit for knowing the age of Earth, which is a matter of some controversy and confusion
among the other GOP candidates. But as for the rest, I am left as
befuddled as ever. I've heard variations on this point approximately a
bazillion times on the internets, always delivered with great
satisfaction, as though that settles that.
But ... settles what?
Earth: ch'-ch'-ch'-changin'
As far as I am aware, zero out of 10 scientists deny that Earth's
climate is always changing and has always changed. Science aficionados
(and Buddhists) are hip to the fact that everything is always changing. That's just, like, life, man.
More to the point, geologists are well aware that Earth used to be a
giant molten hellstone, and then it cooled, reaching a very rough
equilibrium that nonetheless contained within it giant swings between
eras of ice and eras when most of the surface of the planet was covered
in water. It's in all there in the textbooks.
Scientists are also aware that atmospheric carbon dioxide
concentrations have been higher at points in Earth's past. According to
NOAA, we recently hit 400 parts per million of CO2 in the atmosphere. The last time concentrations were that high was, depending on who you believe,
either 2 or 10 million years ago. Prior to that, there were periods
when it was much, much higher. Around 440 million years ago, in the late
Ordovician, they think it may have topped 5,000 ppm. (Skeptical Science has a nice mini-splainer on this.)
Earth's temperature has always changed as well. Wikipedia has a great graphic
that stitches together temperature reconstructions from various data
sets (sediment cores, ice cores, etc.) into a 500-million-year record of
Earth's average temperature, from around the time multicellular life
first emerged:
(Wikipedia, by Glen Fergus)
Not a straight line.
I'm definitely seeing some change there. Paul has a point.
Now let's zoom way in. Here's the last 5 million years or so.
(Wikipedia, by Robert A. Rohde)
Still definitely not straight.
Changier and changier! For the past 3 million years or so, there have
been frequent glacial and interglacial cycles, while overall we've
moved deeper into an ice age (part of a longer ice age that started
around 40 million years ago).
The Holocene epoch: settling down a bit
Enough geologic scene setting. Now let's home in on a time period we
can wrap our heads around: the past 100,000 years. This covers roughly
the time that modern Homo sapiens have been bopping around.
(Young & Steffen, 2009)
Wait, now, what's that over there on the right?
I would draw your attention to the right side of this graph, the past 12,000 years or so. That is what's known as the Holocene epoch, featuring such highlights as the development of agriculture and all subsequent human civilization.
Looks a bit different, doesn't it? As it happens, the Holocene has
been characterized by unusually stable temperatures. Freakishly stable,
really.
This is not to say that change has stopped, of course. (Change, like, never stops.) Let's zoom in further.
(Wikipedia, by Global Warming Art)
As you can see, temperature has fluctuated quite a bit even during
this period. There were variations substantial enough to make a
difference to humans — the Medieval Warm Period during the 10th to 14th
centuries, the Little Ice Age from the 14th to the 19th — but they were
mild enough that human culture persisted and grew.
Long story short: While Earth's climate has experienced wide
fluctuations throughout its history, human civilization, in its wee,
geologically insignificant 10,000 years, has developed entirely within
the comfortable confines of the Holocene. Agriculture, cities, the
written word, industrial civilization, the iPhone — everything we know
has unfolded during this period of stability. There's been climate
change, but spookily little relative to the geological record.
The question — the existential question — is this: How much of our
welfare is tied to the atmospheric conditions in which we developed
advanced civilization? Can we prosper outside those conditions?
Paul seems confident that we can. Heck, there was more carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere 2 million years ago! It was hotter only 100,000 years
ago! What's the bigz?
Saying goodbye to the Holocene
We're about to find out. Here's one final zoom, onto the past 1,000 years.
(Wikipedia, by Global Warming Art)
Seems like something's going on down at the end there.
As you'll note, temperatures are heading up, quickly, pulled along by the extraordinary recent spike in atmospheric carbon dioxide.
(Wikipedia, by Global Warming Art)
There is no other explanation for the recent, comparatively sudden
spike in temperature. Not only does "man have a role," as Paul says, but
scientists are as close to certain as they ever get about anything that human greenhouse gas emissions are the primary driver.
Now, if you take the long view, as Paul does, this might not seem
like a big deal. Whatever changes humanity's massive CO2 emissions might
cause, they're likely to be temporary.
Maybe temperatures will spike for a few thousand years and then
settle back into the Holocene groove. Or maybe the atmosphere, once
knocked out of its temporary Holocene equilibrium, will resume the rapid
glacial-interglacial spikes of the past 100,000 years. Or maybe
something else will happen.
Who knows? What we do know, thanks to Paul, is that Earth's climate has always changed; this too shall pass.
Of course, some of us suffer from a more limited temporal perspective
and are preoccupied with the next 100 years or so. Geologically, that
is nothing, the blink of an eye. But then again, it does encompass the
lives of every extant human and their children and grandchildren.
On our current trajectory,
during those next 100 years we are on course to drive temperatures
higher than human civilization has ever experienced, with a small but
nontrivial chance of driving it so high that civilization becomes
impossible to sustain. This is now accepted by the entire global
scientific community and just about every major political party on Earth
save the US Republican Party.
If our descendants suffer under more intense storms, heat waves, food
shortages, forced migrations, and rising sea levels, they are unlikely
to find Paul's perspective — "Hey, you think it's hot now, you shoulda
see the late Ordovician!" — of any great comfort.
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