Climate Wars
By Gwynne Dyer
One World Publications, 297 pp.

In an era marked by ever-decreasing attention spans, the problem of global warming, which requires a long view decades and even centuries into the future, has aroused a collective shrug from humankind.
The Pentagon, though, has already started planning for frightening scenarios that might arise on a climate-changed planet. Depending on your politics, you may view this as the sensible response to a new strategic landscape, or as a way to keep the tax dollars flowing by โmilitarizingโ climate change. In either case, if conflicts over scarcitylike the fighting in Darfur, which began over rights to a dwindling water supply and which has been dubbed the โfirst climate warโspread to wealthier, more heavily armed countries, keeping the peace could get dicey.
Thatโs the message of Climate Wars, a worthwhile new American edition of a 2008 book by Canadian journalist and historian Gwynne Dyer. Dyer is the author of several books on international affairs, and his columns are regularly featured in The News & Observer. His first book, War, was made into a memorable eight-part miniseries that aired on PBS in the 1980s.
As with War, de-escalation is the plea of his book, but this time the hazardous element is not uranium or plutonium but carbon. Itโs a well-argued, eye-opening book that will convince you of the need for immediate action, if it doesnโt keep you up at night.
Through interviews, quoted at length, with scientists and policymakers, Dyer sums up the current consensus on climate change. The numbers are telling: the pre-industrial atmosphere around the year 1800 was 280 parts per million carbon dioxide; as of 2010 weโre at 390 ppm and rising steadily. No one knows the precise โtipping pointโ beyond which weโll get a calamitously warmer planet, but some of the leading experts in the field think we may have already passed it.
Last summer, at the G8 summit, leaders of most of the highest emitting countries agreed (non-bindingly) to a target of 450 ppm. The figure was arrived at more for political than scientific reasons, but itโs a start. With the present course of inaction and at the current rate of increase of 2โ3 ppm per year, weโll likely pass that number in the next 20โ30 years. Scenarios that were judged โworst-caseโ a few years ago now appear to be the path weโre on. The military and intelligence communities are taking the projections seriously and starting to assess how theyโll affect our security.
Dyer cites a 2007 report by the Center for Naval Analyses, which involved recently retired generals and admirals, as the militaryโs first serious engagement with climate change after years of denial by the commander-in-chief. For his chapter on the geopolitics of climate change, Dyer draws heavily on a study released the same year by collaborating Washington think tanks, written by formerly high-ranking government officials like John Podesta and James Woolsey. The Age of Consequences forecasts a dismaying range of disruptions, like widespread food shortages caused by crop failure, millions of refugees from flooded coastal areas and battles over water. All by 2040.
Dyer presents a series of hypotheticals of his own by interspersing the chapters of Climate Wars with eight fictional dispatches from the future. For example, โChina, 2042โ describes a diplomatic crisis when several Asian governments decide to unilaterally geo-engineer the atmosphere to boost crop yields and feed their starving populations (Dyer mentions another strategy, an โescape hatch,โ that could, but probably wonโt, be part of a global solution: โWe wouldnโt be facing a world food-supply problem soon if we all become vegetarians tomorrowbut we arenโt going to, are we?โ). Dyer is careful to point out that these scenarios โare not intended to be predictions, but only examples of the kinds of political crisis that could be caused by climate change,โ but theyโre plausible enough to make for chilling reading.
Predictions of any kind are a risky enterprise, though, and they can be made a mockery with the passage of time. One of Dyerโs scenarios, โNorthern India, 2036,โ has already come up a dud. It tells of a nuclear exchange between India and Pakistan over rights to the Indus River, which is fed by glacial meltwater from the Himalayas. In forecasting a shriveled Indus, Dyer probably drew on a 2007 working report for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which said the shrinking Himalayan glaciers may be gone by 2035.
India and Pakistan may yet come to radioactive blows (God help us), but the problem here is that the IPCCโs predicted date for when the glaciers might disappear was off by some 300 years; in an apparent mix-up, the original UNESCO glacier study postulated extensive retreat by the year 2350, not 2035. The error was acknowledged by the panel in January, so the persistence of this false meme in Climate Wars, which was republished in a new edition on June 1 and which includes reportage from the Copenhagen climate summit last December (by which time news of the error was circulating in the press), will be embarrassing for Dyer.
Conservatives seized on the IPCC error as proof that global warming is a hoax, but much as theyโd like to paint scientists and writers like Dyer as alarmist Chicken Littles, the evidence is now too strong to ignore. The next IPCC report, due in 2014, will likely be more dire, based on recently observed phenomena. Maybe then the world will finally begin to address the problem in earnest.
Or not. If a healthy proportion of humanity decides to take action, Dyer still isnโt optimistic about our chances of drastically reducing emissions in the short term. He dissects the failure of the Copenhagen conference and observes that, even if scientists and engineers come up with realistic, cost-effective plans to completely replace fossil fuels, โpolitics is what slows it down and screws it up, but no big thing can be done in the human world without a great deal of politics.โ Entrenched interests within countries, and competing interests among them, will make change extremely difficult, all the more so if large-scale social turmoil caused by climate change ends the present era of relative international harmony.
The last part of Climate Wars reads like science fiction, which isnโt intended as criticism. In the absence of a serious course correction, the landscapes our descendents might find themselves in, and the geo-engineering methods they may resort to, sound otherworldly, because they are; they belong not to the world we live in but to the one weโre creating. If humanity isnโt reduced to a few million individuals huddled near the polar regions, it may be because we resorted to pumping the stratosphere with sulfur dioxide to dim the sun; or seeding the ocean with powdered iron, causing huge blooms of carbon-sequestering phytoplankton; or building fleets of ships that continuously spray a fine mist of seawater, enhancing the reflectivity of low-lying stratocumulus clouds.
Though heโs convinced that none of these projects would work as a long-term solution, Dyer believes these or similar options are very likely to be employed as temporary stopgaps to keep the temperature down as we blunder through the next century. Such projects would, in essence, invert our speciesโ relationship with the natural world. We would become its caretakers, โplanetary maintenance engineersโ (in a phrase Dyer quotes from earth scientist James Lovelock), struggling to keep the planet habitable by fiddling with the atmospheric thermostat. The question then becomes, how quickly can we figure out how to work the controls? And will we have the wisdom and courage to end the era of geo-engineering as quickly as possible, and return the planet to its ancient, life-sustaining rhythms?


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