10.25.02 @ 12:02AM
How many news stories have we read recently about the imminent disappearance of the glaciers of Kilimanjaro? Don't believe a single one of them.
How many news stories have we read recently about the imminent
disappearance of the glaciers of Kilimanjaro? This latest spasm of
"envirodoom" stems from Ohio State University glaciologist Lonnie
Thompson's latest paper in Science, in which he predicts
the end to the glaciers by 2020 or so, based upon current trends.
The culprit? Global warming, of course, or so the doomsayers would
have us believe.
It's apparently all a result of global warming caused by man's
pernicious economic activity. At least that's what Ohio State said
in its press release, citing Thompson's "prediction that these
unique bodies of ice will disappear in the next two decades, the
victims of global warming." That was repeated in dozens of
horrifying news stories that appeared beginning on Oct. 17, ranging
from ABC to the Yahoo Daily News.
One of the endlessly fascinating aspects of modern journalism is
the absolute lack of critical insight tendered towards
environmental scares. A cursory inspection of Thompson's own data
shows that Kilimanjaro's glaciers would be dying even if Homo
sapiens were still just hanging around the trees of the Rift
Valley, a few hundred miles to the West.
Thompson cited five surveys of Kilimanjaro, from 1912, 1953,
1976, 1989 and 2000. From 1912 to 1953, global temperature rose
0.74ºF. Most scientists think this warming had mainly to do
with the sun, and little from human activity, as the bulk of human
greenhouse gas emissions took place in the second half of the last
century, not the first.
Kilimanjaro's glaciers lost 45 percent of their real extent in
that era of non-human warming. If the glaciers had continued on
their merry way at the pace established in that period, they would
be gone by now.
But they're still here. From 1953 through 1976, another 21
percent of the original area was uncovered. This was during a
period of global cooling -- yes, cooling -- of 0.13ºF. Ohio
State could have accurately written the following hype at that
time: "Kilimanjaro's glaciers will completely disappear by 2015 if
this cooling trend continues".
It is painfully obvious that global temperatures and the
behavior of Kilimanjaro's glaciers are pretty independent, at least
on the timescale of decades. Instead, local climate should be more
important. Unfortunately, analyses of the local East African
records show little regional cohesion between nearby thermometers,
which argues more that the data are bad than it does for any local
cooling or warming.
Since 1976, another 12 percent of the original mass disappeared,
the slowest rate of decline since 1912. While the local temperature
measurements are clearly questionable, in 1979 satellite monitoring
began. All scientists-even the most ardent global warming
apocalyptics-acknowledge that the satellite is very good at
measuring temperatures at the altitude of Kilimanjaro's
glaciers-about 19,000 feet. In fact, it probably measures
temperatures at that altitude better than it does at sea level.
Around Kilimanjaro, satellite data show a cooling of 0.40ºF
since 1979, which is exactly the same as the global warming rate
between 1912 and 1953 (0.17ºF per decade). Still,
Kilimanjaro's glaciers continued to shrink.
Thompson noted that the period from 11,000 to 4,000 years ago
was warmer in Africa than it is today, and yet Kilimanjaro was
glaciated because it was also wetter than it is today. Some
estimates place today's precipitation at only one-half of what it
was during the warm period. Obviously, precipitation -- not
temperature -- is key to the glaciation of Kilimanjaro.
Did people make it stop snowing? Precipitation in East Africa is
highly correlated with El Niño activity in the tropical
Pacific Ocean. During the last big one, 1997-98, how many stories
-- written by the same journalists and university press offices --
promulgated the very shaky story that El Niños are becoming
more frequent because of global warming?
If people are causing the warming, and warming is causing more
El Niños, then it should be snowing more and more and more
on Kilimanjaro -- more than it did when it was even warmer,
thousands of years ago.
While it's easy to think that global warming and Kilimanjaro are
related, anyone with the smallest computer could have checked to
see if this is true, simply by examining history. Google.com
reveals 369,000 hits under "global temperature histories." For the
more arcane satellite record, which is created by an orbiting
instrument known as a microwave sounding unit (MSU), type in "MSU
temperature history," and you'll get a mere 18,300 responses.
Remember two years ago when the New York Times had to
retract a story about melting of the polar ice cap? In that case,
the facts were a similarly few mouse-clicks away. Kilimanjaro turns
out to be just another snow job, precipitated by a journalistic
community that has lost its desire for critical factual
investigation when it comes to our globe's environment.
topics:
Environment, Global Warming, Africa