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Revealed: How The Smoke Stacks Of America Have Brought The World's Worst Drought To Africa
Independent (UK) ^ | 6-13-2002 | Charles Arthur

Posted on 06/12/2002 3:00:45 PM PDT by blam

Revealed: how the smoke stacks of America have brought the world's worst drought to Africa

By Charles Arthur Technology Editor
13 June 2002

To those who live there, it is as if the rich have stolen the rain. For more than 30 years, the Sahel region of Africa has suffered the longest sustained droughts in the world. In some places, rainfall has fallen by between 20 and 50 per cent.

As a consequence, crops have failed on a huge scale; in the worst years, between 1972 and 1975 and between 1984 and 1985, up to a million people starved to death.

However, for President George Bush, who has only recently accepted that global warming and climate change are the result of human influences – such as the burning of fossil fuels – the idea of a cause involving the developed world is unwelcome.

But new research indicates that pollution from factories and power stations, especially in North America and Europe, has exacerbated drought in countries south of the Sahara.

Researchers have little doubt that the two are connected and also that the effect of the drought will last long after any clean-up.

There are also warnings that growing industrialisation in India and China is likely to create the same problems on the Indian subcontinent – with potentially disastrous effects for millions more people.

According to a report in New Scientist magazine today, climate modelling studies by scientists in Australia and Canada have fingered the clouds of sulphur poured out by vehicles and power stations when they burn fossil fuels for pushing the Saharan rain-belt south.

The effect is complex, which is why it has only just emerged from the analyses. New Scientist explains that Leon Rotstayn of CSIRO, the national research agency in Australia, and Ulrike Lohmann, of Dalhousie University, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, created a computer model that simulated the interactions between sulphur dioxide emissions from power plants and other sources and cloud.

A key element here is that those emissions create huge volumes of "aerosols" – tiny particles about one micrometre across that can remain floating in the atmosphere for days. They are very efficient at scattering light and forming clouds, which reflect sunlight; both effects tend to cool the atmosphere and the Earth below.

The vast amount of aerosols produced especially in the 1980s lingered over the northern hemisphere and tended to cool it down, say the researchers. But it is the final step – to the shifting fortunes of the rain clouds that should linger over the Sahel – which is the subtle one.

David Roberts, the head of the aerosol modelling group at the Meteorological Office's Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research, said: "It's an effect of the thermal balance between the two hemispheres. There has to be a rough balance between the north and south hemispheres – you can't have spare energy in one place or the other. If the Earth was completely symmetrical, then the point of thermal equilibrium, where the total energy on either side of a line was equal, would be the Equator. But because the Northern hemisphere isn't the same as the south [because of the vast energy reservoir of the Pacific, which retains energy more efficiently than land] we find that the Northern hemisphere is warmer than the South."

However, aerosol-driven cooling of the Northern hemisphere pushes that point of thermal equilibrium south – and with it go the rainclouds that people depend on for their crops in the Sahel.

The historical evidence tends to back up the findings.

One key change that the researchers point to is that in the 1980s, improvements in emission laws meant that sulphur emissions in particular dropped – because they were blamed for acid rain, which was noticed far more keenly in the industrialised countries than droughts in sub-Saharan Africa.

Dr Rotstayn and Professor Lohmann said that droughts have become less severe during the past few years. But that does not mean that they have disappeared. Far from it; the whole of southern Africa is facing a "regional food crisis", according to a recent report that notes that a total of six countries in southern Africa have roughly 11 million people who need emergency food assistance. Ironically, the note came from the United States Agency for International Development.

But the cleaning of the air in the US and Europe (and the closure through economic failure of many of the worst polluters in eastern Europe) does not mean that the threat is over. If anything, it could get worse.

Although Dr Roberts says he is "cautious" about taking the interpretation of the link between aerosols in the northern hemisphere and the weather in the Sahel as gospel, he says that if it is correct, then there are other areas around the globe that could be threatened by a new wave of fossil-fuel burning.

"The emissions from China and India are rising," he said yesterday. "And that could affect, for example, the monsoon season in India, which would have an important regional impact. If it weakens the monsoon, then that would be a concern. The subcontinent is very dependent on it; it would be of serious concern to them if that moved. But the aerosols would alter the balance between north and south in the same way."

What is unclear is how the world would cope with change like that. In the Sahel, drought is becoming ingrained: without water, vegetation dies, and the the dry land and the dust thrown up from it into the atmosphere both reflect heat, keeping the thermal equilibrium point in its southerly place. And when it does rain, the lack of plant life means that water just runs away.

"It's a vicious cycle, a land degradation issue," Habiba Gitay, an ecologist who worked on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change told New Scientist. And the blame for starting the cycle turning appears to lie with the developed world. The problem, though, is that nobody knows quite how to stop it and bring back the rain to the places that need it.

Some people think that the first signs of the thermal changes caused by the increasing industrialisation of the developing countries are already being seen. In a worrying echo of the situation in the Sahel, northern China has had unusually dry summers in the past few years, notes New Scientist – while the south has had a notably wet time.

The new theory about the connection between aerosols and rainfall also means that the world will have to expand the sophistication of its understanding of climate change. Because aerosols cool the Earth, it had been thought that they might in some way be beneficial in easing the warming caused by carbon dioxide. But now it can be seen that they also contribute to changing weather patterns in ways that are potentially disastrous for millions of people, as surely as rising sea levels caused by simple global warming.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: africa; america; drought; smokestacks
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Get your checkbook out. There is a case being built for a transfer of wealth from the western nations to the third world. This will be facilitated with a UN world tax, paid mostly by the US. Get Ready!
1 posted on 06/12/2002 3:00:45 PM PDT by blam
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To: clive
FYI (Who will file the first lawsuit charging the US for all the starvation deaths in Africa? This will be in line behind reparations for US blacks)
2 posted on 06/12/2002 3:02:18 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
Amazing, just amazing. I say we all shrug and while we're at it, have as many babies as we can!

Shrug baby, Shrug


3 posted on 06/12/2002 3:03:13 PM PDT by Black Agnes
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To: blam
for President George Bush, who has only recently accepted that global warming and climate change are the result of human influences

No, he didn't. The entire thesis collapses.

4 posted on 06/12/2002 3:03:48 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: blam
Yes, it is the evil white people who are to blame for everything, once again. No mention of the extermination of farmers, the seizing of farms, the butchering of farm animals, the killing of families, livestock and pets. No mention of the hideously racist government of Mugabe, or the fact that farmers are being murdered every day in South Africa. No mention of that at all.

Not one penny for Africa. They have chosen the path of class envy and Marxism, they have turned their backs on everything it takes to create and retain wealth. Now they cry because they are going hungry, and they blame it on "drought". Bullfeathers. Can't they at least come up with a more convincing lie? Or have they expended their intellectual horsepower coming up with the latest in "I need to move twenty million dollars out of the country" scams?

5 posted on 06/12/2002 3:05:41 PM PDT by Billy_bob_bob
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To: blam
Excuse me ("Hack!") ("Cough!") while I reach for another battery for my coal-miner's helmet ... the dust and fumes all over the state are just a bit much.

It says here . . . Oh yeah; our smoke stacks ("Hack!") ("Cough!") are irritating the winds aloft to such a degree in the vector of things, that . . .

Except that we do not have such multitudes of "smoke stacks" anymore.

6 posted on 06/12/2002 3:06:34 PM PDT by First_Salute
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To: blam; aculeus; Orual
"Every bad thing in the world is America's fault, so pay up."
7 posted on 06/12/2002 3:07:27 PM PDT by dighton
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To: dighton
I say give 'em more pollution... as pay back for AIDS
8 posted on 06/12/2002 3:09:02 PM PDT by BubbaJunebug
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To: blam
Dr Roberts says he is "cautious" about taking the interpretation of the link between aerosols in the northern hemisphere and the weather in the Sahel as gospel

That means there is no story here, just wild ass speculation. Of course that wouldn't stop you from pushing your Marxist lies,it never does.

9 posted on 06/12/2002 3:11:04 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: blam
This just shows that to a socialist, there is nothing too bazarre or outrageous when it comes to trying to stick it to those evil capitalists.
10 posted on 06/12/2002 3:11:46 PM PDT by Don Myers
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To: blam
Does this mean that if Africa starts burning lots of fossil fuel the whole world would dry up?
11 posted on 06/12/2002 3:13:00 PM PDT by big bad easter bunny
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To: blam
they could help the famine in Africa by not murdering the crop growers
12 posted on 06/12/2002 3:13:21 PM PDT by Republicus2001
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To: blam
Some people think that the first signs of the thermal changes caused by the increasing industrialisation of the developing countries are already being seen.

Some people think that lavender-spotted ibexes sporting over the electric blue cobblestone they're driving on are being seen, too. I'm not giving my credit card number to either group.

13 posted on 06/12/2002 3:16:21 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: blam
(Rubbing hands together and laughing maniacally...)

That's right! We've got your freakin' rain! And we used it to wash our SUV's!

We'll be coming for your air next, you pathetic losers! We’re going to use it to extend the duration of our bean-dip farts, and there’s nothing you can do to stop us!

14 posted on 06/12/2002 3:16:32 PM PDT by DWSUWF
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To: First_Salute
Except that we do not have such multitudes of "smoke stacks" anymore.

Revealed: America's Hidden Smoke Stacks

15 posted on 06/12/2002 3:17:46 PM PDT by dighton
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To: blam
New Scientist doesn't exactly have a good record with its reporting. Droughts supposedly caused by western industry aside, Africa's problems are indeed human induced (insert list of dictators here).
16 posted on 06/12/2002 3:18:11 PM PDT by NewHampshireDuo
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To: blam
I have to blame the white, western world for all the woes of this planet. It is the western culture that has cut the death rate and caused the population explosion in third world countries. No one to blame but ourselves. We should stop feeding them, and we should stop giving them medicine. They will die back to a population that their primative cultures and environments can sustain, and the problem will be solved. Let nature be.
17 posted on 06/12/2002 3:23:07 PM PDT by Born to Conserve
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To: Republicus2001
they could help the famine in Africa by not murdering the crop growers.

stop making sense.

18 posted on 06/12/2002 3:24:40 PM PDT by d4now
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To: blam
Thanks, I just spent the last 20 minutes cleaning the puke chunks of my 'puter screen.
19 posted on 06/12/2002 3:27:29 PM PDT by rudypoot
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To: blam
Drought is a natural phenomenon, but famine is political and manmade. There has never been a large-scale famine in any country that is democratic with a free press.

In the Soviet Union, the people used to joke:

"What would it take to create a shortage of sand in the Sahara Desert?
Answer: just bring to the Sahara the Grand Socialist Revolution."

20 posted on 06/12/2002 3:29:55 PM PDT by Hagrid
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