From npr.org
Excerpt: 'An Inconvenient Truth'
By Al Gore
May 31, 2006
From the Introduction:
After more than thirty years as a student of the climate crisis, I
have a lot to share. I have tried to tell this story in a way that will
interest all kinds of readers. My hope is that those who read the book and see
the film will begin to feel, as I have for a long time, that global warming is
not just about science and that it is not just a political issue. It is really
a moral issue.
Although it is true that politics at times must play a crucial
role in solving this problem, this is the kind of challenge that ought to
completely transcend partisanship.
So whether you are a Democrat or a Republican, whether you voted
for me or not, I very much hope that you will sense that my goal is to share
with you both my passion for the Earth and my deep sense of concern for its
fate. It is impossible to feel one without the other when you know all the
facts.
I also want to convey my strong feeling that what we are facing is
not just a cause for alarm, it is paradoxically also a cause for hope. As many
know, the Chinese expression for "crisis" consists of two characters
side by side. The first is the symbol for "danger," the second the
symbol for "opportunity."
The climate crisis is, indeed, extremely dangerous. In fact it is
a true planetary emergency. Two thousand scientists, in a hundred countries,
working for more than twenty years in the most elaborate and well-organized
scientific collaboration in the history of humankind, have forged an
exceptionally strong consensus that all the nations on Earth must work together
to solve the crisis of global warming.
The voluminous evidence now strongly suggests that unless we act
boldly and quickly to deal with the underlying causes of global warming, our
world will undergo a string of terrible catastrophes, including more and
stronger storms like Hurricane Katrina, in both the Atlantic and the Pacific.
We are melting the North Polar ice cap and virtually all of the
mountain glaciers in the world. We are destabilizing the massive mound of ice
on Greenland and the equally enormous mass of ice propped up on top of islands
in West Antarctica, threatening a worldwide increase in sea levels of as much
as twenty feet.
The list of what is now endangered due to global warming also
includes the continued stable configuration of ocean and wind currents that has
been in place since before the first cities were built almost 10,000 years ago.
We are dumping so much carbon dioxide into the Earth's environment
that we have literally changed the relationship between the Earth and the Sun.
So much of that CO2 is being absorbed into the oceans that if we continue at
the current rate we will increase the saturation of calcium carbonate to levels
that will prevent formation of corals and interfere with the making of shells
by any sea creature.
Global warming, along with the cutting and burning of forests and
other critical habitats, is causing the loss of living species at a level
comparable to the extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million
years ago. That event was believed to have been caused by a giant asteroid.
This time it is not an asteroid colliding with the Earth and wreaking havoc; it
is us.
Last year, the national academies of science in the eleven most
influential nations came together to jointly call on every nation to
"acknowledge that the threat of climate change is clear and
increasing" and declare that the "scientific understanding of climate
changes is now sufficiently clear to justify nations taking prompt
action."
So the message is unmistakably clear. This crisis means
"danger"!
Why do our leaders seem not to hear such a clear warning? Is it
simply that it is inconvenient for them to hear the truth?
If the truth is unwelcome, it may seem easier just to ignore it.
But we know from bitter experience that the consequences of doing
so can be dire.
For example, when we were first warned that the levees were about
to break in New Orleans because of Hurricane Katrina, those warnings were
ignored. Later, a bipartisan group of members of Congress chaired by
Representative Tom Davis (R-VA.), chairman of the House Government Reform
Committee, said in an official report, "The White House failed to act on
the massive amounts of information at its disposal," and that a
"blinding lack of situational awareness and disjointed decision-making
needlessly compounded and prolonged Katrina's horror."
Today, we are hearing and seeing dire warnings of the worst
potential catastrophe in the history of human civilization: a global climate
crisis that is deepening and rapidly becoming more dangerous than anything we
have ever faced.
And yet these clear warnings are also being met with a "blinding
lack of situational awareness" -- in this case, by the Congress, as well
as the president.
As Martin Luther King Jr. said in a speech not long before his
assassination: "We are now faced with the fact, my friends, that tomorrow
is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In this unfolding
conundrum of life and history, there is such a thing as being too late.
"Procrastination is still the thief of time. Life often
leaves us standing bare, naked, and dejected with a lost opportunity. The tide
in the affairs of men does not remain at flood -- it ebbs. We may cry out
desperately for time to pause in her passage, but time is adamant to every plea
and rushes on. Over the bleached bones and jumbled residues of numerous
civilizations are written the pathetic words, 'Too late.' There is an invisible
book of life that faithfully records our vigilance in our neglect. Omar Khayyam
is right: 'The moving finger writes, and having writ moves on.'"
But along with the danger we face from global warming, this crisis
also brings unprecedented opportunities.
What are the opportunities such a crisis also offers? They include
not just new jobs and new profits, though there will be plenty of both, we can
build clean engines, we can harness the Sun and the wind; we can stop wasting
energy; we can use our planet's plentiful coal resources without heating the
planet.
The procrastinators and deniers would have us believe this will be
expensive. But in recent years, dozens of companies have cut emissions of heat-trapping
gases while saving money. Some of the world's largest companies are moving
aggressively to capture the enormous economic opportunities offered by a clean
energy future.
But there's something even more precious to be gained if we do the
right thing.
The climate crisis also offers us the chance to experience what
very few generations in history have had the privilege of knowing: a
generational mission; the exhilaration of a compelling moral purpose; a shared
and unifying cause; the thrill of being forced by circumstances to put aside
the pettiness and conflict that so often stifle the restless human need for
transcendence; the opportunity to rise.
When we do rise, it will fill our spirits and bind us together.
Those who are now suffocating in cynicism and despair will be able to breathe
freely. Those who are now suffering from a loss of meaning in their lives will
find hope.
When we rise, we will experience an epiphany as we discover that
this crisis is not really about politics at all. It is a moral and spiritual
challenge.