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The Sun Also Flares - If we get hit with a once-in-a-century solar storm, we’re history.
NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE ^ | January 28, 2010 | Clifford D. May

Posted on 01/28/2010 11:30:12 AM PST by neverdem

If we get hit with a once-in-a-century solar storm, we’re history.

 

Had the earthquake that hit Haiti shaken Florida instead, the death toll would not have been so tragically high — over 150,000 at last count. In Haiti, as in other impoverished countries, buildings are often shoddily constructed, infrastructure is weak, and governance is incompetent. The primary response to disaster: Wait for help from abroad.

It’s a well established rule: Rich nations endure natural disasters better than poor nations. But there may be an exception. Stay with me for a moment and you’ll see what I mean.

In recent years, Americans have become dependent not just on electricity but on computers, microchips, and satellites. The infrastructure that supports all this has become increasingly sophisticated — but not more resilient. On the contrary, as this infrastructure has become more complex, it also has become more fragile and therefore more vulnerable — an Achilles’ heel.

That is why, in 2001, the U.S. government established a commission to “assess the threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) attack.” Such an attack would involve the detonation of a nuclear warhead at high altitude over the American mainland, producing a shockwave powerful enough to knock out electrical power, electronics, communications, transportation, refrigeration, water-pumping stations, sewage systems, and much more. Think of a blackout, but one of indefinite duration — because we have no plan for recovery and could expect little or no help from abroad.

Historian William R. Forstchen researched what America would be like in the aftermath of an EMP attack for his novel One Second After. I don’t think I’m spoiling the experience for prospective readers by telling you that Forstchen is convinced the result would be millions of deaths from starvation and disease, a catastrophe from which America would never fully recover.

The EMP commission also reported that Iran — which is feverishly working to acquire nuclear weapons — has conducted tests in which it launched missiles and exploded warheads at high altitudes. The CIA has translated Iranian military journals in which EMP attacks against the U.S. are explicitly discussed.

Might Iran’s rulers orchestrate such an attack if and when they acquire nuclear capability? That is a heated debate among defense experts. But what is almost never discussed is the threat of a naturally occurring EMP event.

I first learned about this possibility a few months ago at a conference organized by Empact America, a bipartisan, non-profit organization concerned exclusively with the EMP challenge. Scientists there explained “severe space weather” — in particular, storms on the surface of the sun that could trigger an EMP event.

The strongest solar storm on record is the Carrington Event of 1859, named after Richard Carrington, an astronomer who witnessed the super solar flare that set off the event as he was projecting an image of the sun onto a white screen. In those days, of course, there was nothing much to damage. A high-intensity burst of electromagnetic energy shot through telegraph lines, disrupting communications, shocking technicians, and setting their papers on fire. Northern Lights were visible as far south as Cuba and Hawaii. But otherwise life went on as normal.

The same would not be true were a solar storm of similar magnitude to erupt today. Instead, the infrastructure we depend on would be wiped out. Most of us would not adapt well to this sudden return to a pre-industrial age.

How likely is a repeat of the Carrington Event? Scientists say it is not only possible — it is inevitable. What they don’t know is when. The best estimates suggest that super solar storms occur once every 100 years — which means we are 50 years overdue.

Both the EMP Commission and a 2008 study by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) call for a response: hardening the electrical grid and other components of the infrastructure to increase the chances they would survive, as well as pre-positioning spares of essential, complex components of the electrical grid and other infrastructure critical to communications and emergency public services.

And it would certainly help if scientists could learn to forecast solar storms reliably. If we know one is coming, there are steps that can be taken to reduce the destruction. In particular, the electrical grid could be shut down; planes could be grounded (Air Force One is designed to withstand an EMP attack, but other planes would fall from the sky); citizens could be instructed not to leave home — in particular, to stay out of their cars, which would stop working — until the storm subsided.

President Obama has pledged $100 million to help Haiti recover from its recent earthquake. By coincidence, that’s precisely the amount that the NAS recommends be spent on measures that could limit by 60 to 70 percent the damage resulting from an EMP event. When you consider that such an event — whether naturally occurring or a “man-caused disaster” — could cause trillions of dollars in damage and claim more lives than were lost in World War II, that sounds like a reasonably priced investment.

Clifford D. May, a former New York Times foreign correspondent, is president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a policy institute focusing on terrorism and Islamism. 



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: catastrophism; emp; iran; science; solarscience; sun; terrorism; wot
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To: gogogodzilla

I have 2 vehicles and an old school 7.5 KW generator that still use breaker points and analog carburetors.

(That means impervious to EMP for those in Rio Linda).

Me and mine will be fine.


61 posted on 01/28/2010 5:13:27 PM PST by Don W (I only keep certain folks' numbers in my 'phone so I know NOT to answer when they call)
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To: Don W

Well, then... you’re set.

:-P


62 posted on 01/28/2010 5:22:11 PM PST by gogogodzilla (Live free or die!)
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To: Badabing Badablonde

Thought it was “If my aunt had balls she`d be my uncle.”?


63 posted on 01/28/2010 5:36:25 PM PST by nomad
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To: trickyricky
The Amish could (and would) go on pretty much like nothing happened. Might have trouble storing their daily milk crop but that would be about it. And the Older the Order the better off.
64 posted on 01/28/2010 5:45:37 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: neverdem

Bush’s fault.

(Says Obama)


65 posted on 01/28/2010 5:50:13 PM PST by FormerACLUmember (The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule. - H. L. Menken.)
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To: USCG SimTech

So, have this 1942 Zenith radio, has shortwaves and regular AM. Runs on batteries too, though has to be cobbled because nobody makes them anymore. But if what you say is true there might not be anything to listen to!! Hm.


66 posted on 01/28/2010 6:40:42 PM PST by Freedom4US
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To: neverdem

EMP is mostly hype. - It would take hundreds of detonations to do any real damage. The intensity of the pulse varies inversely as the cube of the distance (or if the weapon has a large concentrating reflector, as 1/2 the cube of the distance.


67 posted on 01/28/2010 7:02:34 PM PST by editor-surveyor (Democracy, the vilest form of government, pits the greed of an angry mob vs. the rights of a man)
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To: Swordmaker; 75thOVI; aimhigh; Alice in Wonderland; AndrewC; aragorn; aristotleman; ...
Thanks neverdem.
 
Catastrophism
 
· join · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post new topic · subscribe ·
 

68 posted on 01/28/2010 7:36:42 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Happy New Year! Freedom is Priceless.)
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To: TonyInOhio
Our enemies won't need a vast arsenal to destroy us completely; two or three nuclear weapons would send us back to the 1850s.

They won't get all the Tridents though.

69 posted on 01/28/2010 9:22:43 PM PST by Mike Darancette (Obama's only 2012 hope; lose one or both houses of Congress in 2010.)
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To: edcoil
I did not say the planet was “fragile”. Humans are though.

There have been several near life-extinguishing events on this planet where most species on earth perished. It is naive to think it won't happen again

70 posted on 01/28/2010 10:03:13 PM PST by PresidentFelon
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To: edcoil

sorry, I guess I did say the planet is fragile after re-reading my comments. I Mis-spoke. Human beings are fragile


71 posted on 01/28/2010 10:06:14 PM PST by PresidentFelon
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To: neverdem; JasonC
I'm not going to take any position on the threat or lack thereof to civilization as we know it, because I simply can't judge what might or might not survive such an EMP.....

but I do find it interesting that the NASA item you linked on super solar flares says it's more like a once in 500 yr. event (for that magnitude) -- although *we* don't know nearly enough to say how often it happens

that NASA web page states that the interval is more like 500 yrs, although *we* can't be sure:

""In the 160-year record of geomagnetic storms, the Carrington event is the biggest." It's possible to delve back even farther in time by examining arctic ice. "Energetic particles leave a record in nitrates in ice cores," he explains. "Here again the Carrington event sticks out as the biggest in 500 years and nearly twice as big as the runner-up." These statistics suggest that Carrington flares are once in a half-millennium events. The statistics are far from solid, however, and Hathaway cautions that we don't understand flares well enough to rule out a repeat in our lifetime."
72 posted on 01/29/2010 12:26:04 AM PST by Enchante (Obamanation: Pour sunlight into all of YOUR illegal campaign donations! Release all records!)
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To: PresidentFelon

No more fragile then any other species. You are correct in that species come and go and in those events where most disappeared - I don’t know of anything they could have done to change it so its best to enjoy the time we are here.


73 posted on 01/29/2010 5:00:30 AM PST by edcoil (If I had 1 cent for every dollar the government saved, Bill Gates and I would be friends.)
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To: ansel12

I appreciate what you’re saying, and I agree to some extent. But the scenario that I’m imagining is 500 middle class stock brokers in Times Square three days after the trucks stop running and the lattes aren’t flowing. All the leadership and expertise in the world won’t immediately produce something to eat. And, one other little point of which I’m sure you are aware, there are still plenty of savages out there that we will still have to deal with.

I feel obligated to say this because some people on this forum can’t disucss things logically: this is not a personal attack on you and is put out purely for discussion. I’m not trying to start a pointless flame war. Thanks.


74 posted on 01/29/2010 6:00:24 AM PST by suthener
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To: suthener

There will always be the valid (and dramatic) examples of worse case scenarios and inner cities burning and unable to conduct themselves in an intelligent, disciplined, cooperative manner, but the average American in flyover country and the suburbs, will be dealing with a much more civilized, orderly version of state of emergency, and that doesn’t get mentioned enough.


75 posted on 01/29/2010 7:56:32 AM PST by ansel12 (anti SoCon. Earl Warren's court 1953-1969, libertarian hero, anti social conservative loser.)
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To: neverdem

btt


76 posted on 01/29/2010 8:02:15 AM PST by BIGLOOK (Keelhaul Congress!)
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To: edcoil; PresidentFelon
No more fragile then [sic] any other species.

Consider the yucca moth and its relationship to the yucca plant and compare the fragility of its existence to, say, that of termites or salmon or quahog clams. Which of these species is the most fragile? Whichever species has the greatest reliance on the most easily disrupted and smallest number of factors essential to its survival is the most fragile species.
77 posted on 01/29/2010 8:50:33 AM PST by aruanan
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To: randomhero97
I wish. We had it before there was a dime of research money anywhere, and we had it five times as bad before there was any science to speak of. No, this one is one of those hardy human nature things that conservativism is better than a mere ideology, for acknowledging.
78 posted on 01/29/2010 9:47:05 AM PST by JasonC
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To: neverdem
Yes I doubt it. The military consists of boy scouts who have a motto. Get a life please.
79 posted on 01/29/2010 9:48:13 AM PST by JasonC
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To: Enchante
They are making it up. They always do. And always in the same stupid doom mongering direction.

"The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary."

- H.L. Mencken

80 posted on 01/29/2010 9:50:41 AM PST by JasonC
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