
The only way to avoid this catastrophe is to keep global temperature rise below 1.5 centigrade.
There are many reasons why climate scientists are coming to the view that even a 2°C rise is too much. From increasing incidence of extreme weather events – such as the still unfolding disaster in southern Africa – to the likely impact on world crops and the complete disappearance of island nations, there is much that could be said on this topic.
And the change, from believing that 2 degrees is “safe” to now looking for no more than a 1.5 centigrade increase, is the main reason why we are suddenly seeing headlines such as “only 12 years to save the planet”.
In a short column I can’t properly discuss all the potential problems. So, I’m going to concentrate on coral reef destruction.
There are several reasons for this. For a start, it’s a subject I can claim expertise in as, 30 years ago, I was one of the first people to build computer models of how coral reefs grow. Furthermore, large-scale extinctions are going to be the longest lasting effect of global-warming.
The fossil record shows us that, following big losses of biodiversity, it take 5-10 million years for Earth to recover. The final reason for looking at tropical reefs is that they are a “climate canary”.
Canaries were taken down mines to give early-warning of dangerous gas build-up and, if increasing loss of our reefs does not provide a wake-up call to the world that greenhouse gas build-up is serious, I suspect nothing will.
Total destruction of all tropical coral reefs sounds like an exaggeration, but there are good reasons for making such a dramatic statement. The issue is coral-bleaching – the fact that excessively warm water turns corals white.
This happens because corals are not one organism but two. The coral polyp itself is an animal but it hosts a plant in what’s called a symbiotic relationship – a partnership that provides benefits to both participants. In this case, the plant feeds the coral and the coral shelters the plant.
Bleaching happens if water becomes a few degrees too warm, for more than a few weeks, since the warmth kills the symbiotic plant and the coral then loses its colour and eventually dies.
Bleaching is a natural process that happens now and again and has done so for millions of years. Normally it’s not a problem because new corals grow back after about ten years and the frequency with which coral reefs find themselves in hot water is much less than once a decade.
The problem is that global warming is increasing this frequency. Today, with one degree of warming, bleaching occurs about once a decade and our reefs are struggling.
In fifteen years’ time or so – when warming will probably get to 1.5 degrees if we don’t do anything now – the frequency will have risen to about once every two and half years and most reefs will be dying.
If we get to a two centigrade rise, reefs will bleach every year and they will be doomed.
26 March 2019









