Catastrophic Climate Change, Bunker Tax and why we need to talk about NZ as an Ark

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One of the most important news opinions that got missed over the week was this excruciating evaluation of global warming bay Bernard Hickey

Sea and air temperatures smashed records in 2023 and now most of the Davos crowd expect a catastrophic global climate event in the next decade. So why can’t humans organise themselves to stop one happening?

…his points are deeply concerning…

2023 was the year we lived most dangerously

  • The year 2023 was a defining year for climate change, with surface and ocean temperature, along with sea ice extent records being smashed. We review the data courtesy of Zeke Hausfather and Andrew Dessler on Carbon Brief and The Climate Brink substack.
  • The contributors to 2023’s unexpectedly high warming include human forcing, a swift transition from La Niña to El Niño, a solar maximum, the Hunga Tonga volcanic eruption and a reduction in aerosol pollution from marine fuels. It turns out that even in combination, these do not provide a sufficient explanation for the warming that we experienced in 2023. What on earth is up with the climate? We are left with ‘natural variability’ and James Hansen’s explanation, but no satisfactory conclusion.
  • The World Economic Forum (WEF) released its Global Risk Report for 2024, showing that 63% of elite respondents to the WEF’s Perceptions Survey fear a global catastrophic risk event will occur in the next decade. The top four potential catastrophic risks they fear are environmental.
  • Why can’t we act? Are we zombies or just evolutionarily unfit? We say that there is just not enough research into the human cultural and social underpinnings of global catastrophic risks, and this requires urgent attention!

Are we there yet?

The year 2023 proved to be a defining year for climate change. It was a year in which temperature records, both on land and at sea, were not just broken, but absolutely pummelled. We experienced palpable climate phenomena, in vastly disparate places, bearing the unmistakable fingerprint of human-caused climate change. And we saw a range of different explanations emerge, some of which challenged the mainstream climate consensus. We also had the uncomfortable experience of witnessing the first UNFCCC climate conference run by fossil fuel interests, which had at least some success in making transparent the complete inadequacy of the current globally coordinated response.

One big question that emerged in 2023 was whether climate change was accelerating. Have we hit some kind of turning or tipping point?

For a comprehensive analysis of the climate record in 2023, you can’t do better than Zeke Hausfather’s State of the Climate report on Climate Brief, along with his and Andrew Dessler’s comments on the The Climate Brink substack. I’ve drawn some key information from these sources.

First of all, 2023 was unambiguously the warmest year on record:

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This result was unexpected. The actual surface temperature for 2023 was well beyond even the confidence intervals of the predictions for the year from the major datasets. Berkeley Earth recorded a 1.54˚C increase above pre-industrial levels for the year. It wasn’t just surface temperatures breaking records. It was also ocean temperature and Antarctic sea-ice extent. Splitting out the land and ocean surface temperatures, as can be seen in the chart below, reveals a particularly sharp spike in ocean heat content (OHC), as well as showing average surface temperatures over land surpassing 2˚C for the first time compared to pre-industrial levels.

According to Hausfather,

Last year was the warmest on record for the heat content of the world’s oceans. Ocean heat content (OHC) has increased by around 473 zettajoules – a billion trillion joules – since the 1940s. The heat increase in 2023 alone compared to 2021 – about 15 zettajoules – is around 25 times as much as the total energy produced by all human activities on Earth in 2021 (the latest year in which global primary energy statistics are available).

While the summer minimum for arctic sea-ice extent was the sixth lowest ever, the Antarctic hit new record lows for almost the entire year.

Antarctic sea ice was particularly low between June and November, shattering prior records by a substantial margin. While long-term trends in Antarctic sea ice have been ambiguous in the past (unlike in the Arctic where there is a consistent long-term decline), there is increasing evidence that human-driven warming is starting to drive significant loss of sea ice in the region. 

The following chart shows Arctic (red line) and Antarctic (blue line) sea ice extent day-by-day for 2023, along with the historical ranges in corresponding shading.

Scientists have explored several possible reasons for the extreme results in 2023, including El Niño/La Niña, the Hunga Tonga volcanic eruption, the solar cycle, reductions in marine fuel pollution and anthropogenic forcing.

According to Hausfather

… both the Tonga eruption and the phase-out of sulphur in marine fuel are problematic explanations of extreme temperatures in 2023. 

There is still a vigorous debate in the scientific literature about whether the eruption cooled or warmed the planet based on estimates of both sulphur dioxide and water vapour in the atmosphere, with some papers arguing for warming and others for cooling. Some modelling suggests that the largest impacts of the eruption would be in winter months, which does not match the timing of extreme summer temperatures experienced in 2023.

Similarly, the phase-out of sulphur in marine fuels occurred in 2020. If it had a large climate impact, it would show up in 2021 and 2022 rather than suddenly affecting the record in 2023. While it definitely has had a climate impact – alongside the broader reduction in aerosol emissions over the past three decades – the timing suggests that its likely not the primary driver of 2023 extremes.

Even El Niño – the usual suspect behind record warm years – does not clearly explain 2023 temperatures. Historically global temperatures have lagged around three months behind El Niño conditions in the tropical Pacific; for example, El Niño developed quite similarly in 1997, 2015 and 2023. But it was the following year – 1998 and 2016 – that saw record high temperatures. 

This leaves us lacking a clear explanation for why global temperatures were so high in 2023. Andrew Dessler suggests here that the answer will probably turn out to be the result of natural variation. At the same time, Dessler argues, the models are predicting an acceleration in global warming in the future as greenhouse gases continue to grow, while aerosols decline, just not at the abrupt rate experienced in 2023.

This is not uncontroversial – in an opinion piece for the New York Timesin October last year, Zeke Hausfather said

…while many experts have been cautious about acknowledging it, there is increasing evidence that global warming has accelerated over the past 15 years rather than continued at a gradual, steady pace. That acceleration means that the effects of climate change we are already seeing — extreme heat waves, wildfires, rainfall and sea level rise — will only grow more severe in the coming years.

I don’t make this claim lightly. Among my colleagues in climate science, there are sharp divisions on this question, and some aren’t convinced it’s happening.

He points to three lines of evidence:

  1. the rate of surface temperature warming over the past 15 years has been 40% higher than the rate since the 1970’s;
  2. there has been an acceleration in ocean heat content over recent decades (this is where 90% of global heating is stored; and
  3. satellite measurements of earth’s energy imbalance show a big increase in the amount of heat trapped in earth’s atmosphere over the past couple of decades.

Adding an extra frisson of doubt is James Hansen’s paper, ‘Global Warming in the Pipeline’ which claims that climate scientists have underestimated climate sensitivity and that this has been masked in the models by a corresponding under-estimation of the cooling effect provided by aerosol pollution (which increases Earth’s albedo). He claims that the abrupt increase in global surface temperature experienced in 2023 is consistent with predictions in his paper. In a January 2024 communication, he and his co-authors said,

We expect record monthly temperatures to continue into mid-2024 due to the present large planetary energy imbalance, with the 12- month running-mean global temperature reaching +1.6-1.7°C relative to 1880-1920 and falling to only +1.4 ± 0.1°C during the following La Nina. Considering the large planetary energy imbalance, it will be clear that the world is passing through the 1.5°C ceiling, and is headed much higher, unless steps are taken to affect Earth’s energy imbalance.

This is considerably higher than the standard models are predicting (shown in the chart below). Another year of beating the model predictions in 2024 will certainly strengthen his case, but it still won’t prove definitive.

Now what about a Bunker tax for billionaires wanting to flee to NZ…

Davos jet-setters are worried

Meantime the World Economic Forum’s Global Risk Report for 2024 now has environmental risks occupying the top four spots over the next ten years, with AI propagated misinformation and disinformation in the near term lowering society’s ability to adequately address them.

The report worries about environmental risks hitting ‘a point of no return’, exploring the consequences of the world passing at least one ‘climate tipping point’ within the next decade.

Recent research suggests that the threshold for triggering long-term, potentially irreversible and self-perpetuating changes to select planetary systems is likely to be passed at or before 1.5°C of global warming, which is currently anticipated to be reached by the early 2030s. Many economies will remain largely unprepared for “non-linear” impacts: the potential triggering of a nexus of several related socio-environmental risks has the potential to speed up climate change, through the release of carbon emissions, and amplify related impacts, threatening climate-vulnerable populations. The collective ability of societies to adapt could be overwhelmed, considering the sheer scale of potential impacts and infrastructure investment requirements, leaving some communities and countries unable to absorb both the acute and chronic effects of rapid climate change (P. 7).

One of the recent research studies that they refer to is The Global Tipping Points Report, found here. The WEF’s perceptions survey reveals a remarkably pessimistic outlook with 63% of correspondents believing that the risk of a global catastrophe occurring within the next ten years is either highly elevated or looming.

The sense that things are not going well and that we are heading into very turbulent and stormy times turns out to be widespread, at least among ‘the Forum’s extensive network of academic, business, government, civil society and thought leaders’ (p. 99) who were canvassed for the survey. If you are worried, you are very definitely not alone – the global elite is right there with you, also very worried.

…let’s tax these Billionaires with a Bunker Tax!

 

As the reality of the enormity of climate change starts to dawn, people will be looking for ‘lifeboats’, NZ is one of these ‘lifeboats’…

Why NZ could be humanity’s ‘lifeboat’ in an extinction

Scientists have singled out New Zealand as a potential “ark” to reboot civilisation if a deadly pandemic swept the planet.

In a study just published in the international journal Risk Analysis , researchers found that New Zealand, along with Australia and Iceland, could serve as “lifeboats” to help humanity recover from a full-scale extinction event.

…while the focus here is on a pandemic, the same is true of NZ being a lifeboat for climate change.

The current political spectrum in New Zealand can not radically adapt fast enough to adopt the changes we must make if we are to survive the climate crisis. It will require a radical Political Movement that elects a Party to implement Fortress Aotearoa…

    • Move away from intensive farming and look to become domestically self sustainable in terms of food.
    • Immediately ban all water exports
    • legalise cannabis & hemp
    • 5 year Parliamentary term.
    • Upper and Lower House (Upper House 50-50 split between Māori & Pakeha that can hold up legislation if unhappy about Treaty issues)
    • Massive investment into R&D from Government with the understanding research is to benefit NZ first before sold offshore.
    • Ministry of Works that builds state housing
    • Large scale increase in Navy, Army & Airforce.
    • Mass limiting of tourism numbers with increased tourist taxes.
    • Only citizens can vote.
    • Sustainable immigration and an end to exploitative migrant workers.
    • Resettlement Programms for all pacific island neighbours.
    • Increase refugee in take to 10000 per year
    • Fully funded public services.
    • Mass Green housing rebuild.
    • 100% renewable energy for entire country.
    • Massive tree planting across previous farming land.
    • Wholesale re-write of state services act to end commercial values.
    • Investment into basic pharmaceutical production.
    • Financial transaction tax
    • Wealth tax
    • Multinational tax
    • Inheritance tax

As the climate crisis unfolds more and more people in fury will turn against the current political system too wedded to the economic profits margins of the polluters. It is just a matter of time before the NZ electorate rejects the limitations of the current political spectrum.

This is the age of consequences.

 

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15 COMMENTS

    • Good point why? There isn’t a clear profit line to it for some eager beaver I suppose. By the way beavers are very good at building houses, nests. Practically most animals and insects are better able to look after themselves and their babies than we are. Why is that?

  1. Facts do not change people’s minds. Stories do. Read the 1955 novel “The Chrysalids” by John Wyndham. There is the ‘tribulation’ in warming Labrador. and the special children harmed by religious dogma are rescued by NZ which is now a ‘lifeboat’.

  2. Unfortunately, normality only ever extends as far as the actions of we, the people. Big business, including the sliver that produces the majority of carbon in the atmosphere, they are excluded from normality. Ain’t that just typical. Makes you wonder….

  3. What is environmental footprint of the “Davos crowd” ?
    Oh, I forgot. Their carbon emmisions do not count, their busineses and/or administrations fart lavender smelling pollutant absorbing bullshitanium.
    Self-appointed virtue signallers.

  4. This I agree with 100%.

    As usual Martyn you are ahead of the Flock.

    The current political spectrum in New Zealand can not radically adapt fast enough to adopt the changes we must make if we are to survive the climate crisis. It will require a radical Political Movement that elects a Party to implement Fortress Aotearoa…

    Move away from intensive farming and look to become domestically self sustainable in terms of food.
    Immediately ban all water exports
    legalise cannabis & hemp
    5 year Parliamentary term.
    Upper and Lower House (Upper House 50-50 split between Māori & Pakeha that can hold up legislation if unhappy about Treaty issues)
    Massive investment into R&D from Government with the understanding research is to benefit NZ first before sold offshore.
    Ministry of Works that builds state housing
    Large scale increase in Navy, Army & Airforce.
    Mass limiting of tourism numbers with increased tourist taxes.
    Only citizens can vote.
    Sustainable immigration and an end to exploitative migrant workers.
    Resettlement Programms for all pacific island neighbours.
    Increase refugee in take to 10000 per year
    Fully funded public services.
    Mass Green housing rebuild.
    100% renewable energy for entire country.
    Massive tree planting across previous farming land.
    Wholesale re-write of state services act to end commercial values.
    Investment into basic pharmaceutical production.
    Financial transaction tax
    Wealth tax
    Multinational tax
    Inheritance tax

    • Gosh Geoff Lye I think yours is the biggest sensible list of things we could do 90% (percentages?) of which would be of either immediate benefit or be trialled to start us on a good forward future-facing path.

  5. As I’ve written here many times before: We’re at enormous risk of having our AO/NZ taken from us and the back door has been opened by the criminal elite aka neo-liberals who now own and operate the Zombi shambles we think of as our corrupt politic while our politicians and their enabled criminals are wading kneed deep through our money. And that’s why we should snuggle up to The Crown for if no other reason than of that being our last hope. The Crown are *human beings while Wall Street and the Fed Reserve enabled hyper wealthy criminal elite are not. They’re now-a-days an algorithm designed to get all money from everywhere at all times by any means possible.
    You must watch this. And you must spread it around. I originally sent this link as an attachment back in 2012.
    Could it be a spark to start a bonfire? Do you ever wonder why our houses are now a market and no longer just somewhere to live? Ever wonder how it works, that once you’re convinced that your home is now worth millions so why not borrow against your mortgage to buy stuff and things that become [worth-less] in three to five years?
    Rogers neo-liberalism is a scam. Today’s politicians are NOT politicians, they’re crooks pimping his scam. We have hundreds of thousands of people living in bewildering poverty and our politicians really, actually, don’t care. Why is that?
    YouTube.
    ‘How To Be a Crook’
    “Ever wanted to rob your fellow man? Learn the different methods you can use… and learn who is using them on YOU right now.”
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oHbwdNcHbc
    * More humane than biden or trumph.

  6. Talk – what sort of talk? Getting it right and proper and to the point can be very hard in our ‘mannered’ society with its various agendas. Eliza womanfully ploughed on hitting the wrong note and being misunderstood risibly. Just a bright moment in our sad and urgent discourse with those who regard life-changing matters as a battle of words.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5S7k1RDcE0

  7. The word ‘prolix’ springs th mind reading this.

    As a ‘selfish’ boomer I must say the I have far greater worries for my children and grandchildren, such as:

    – the loss of effective antibiotics
    – a pandemic far worse than Covid
    – war in the Middle East
    – war with China
    – NATO at war with Russia

    Quite frankly if we get through the next 20 years unscathed it will be a miracle. We can then worry about climate change.

    • Queue up you calamities, sort yourselves out by alphabetical order, and wait for your turn to be called! The trouble is that it doesn’t happen like that. The oldies noticed that in the past and came up with the saying that troubles tend to come in threes. That was then, now everything is bigger and faster and better than in the past – seems to work for calamities mostly.

      If you can gather into a supportive group you might prepare yourselves and then metaphorically stand in a circle facing outwards, like the defensive vulnerables facing incursions or attacks from a determined fate; determination and climate change interlaced.

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