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Summer of Reading: Humanity’s Moment
Part of our Summer of Reading series: A personal call to action from an Australian IPCC author
PROLOGUE
________
Life on the frontline
IT’S PITCH BLACK AS I slip out of bed, trying not to wake my husband. It’s 5.15 a.m. on a Saturday in the dead of winter 2020; the last thing I feel like doing is leaving my downy cocoon to talk about our destabilising world.
As one of the dozen or so Australian lead authors involved in the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report, it’s my job to review thousands of peer-reviewed scientific studies and distil their key findings. Our task in Working Group 1 is to provide the scientific foundation for understanding the risk of human-induced climate change, its potential impacts, and options for adapting to and avoiding dangerous levels of climate change. The cycle typically takes around six years to complete, from initial scoping to final government approval. Despite the outbreak of a deadly pandemic, work continues on, as the stakes are now so high. Our assessment forms the technical foundation for trying to achieve the Paris Agreement targets of keeping global warming to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, and as close to 1.5°C as possible. It’s the information that helps us figure out how to keep our planetary conditions safe for humanity.
The first volume of this global climate assessment report is due out in mid-2021, and this morning’s meeting is one of many since the process started back in June 2018. Our second draft has just come back from government and expert review; we now have 51,387 technical comments to address ahead of the Final Government Draft that will go to the UN for approval. Today’s task is to come up with a strategy for responding to each comment assigned to our chapter and revising our text to meet our deadline.
Before embarking on the IPCC process, I had managed to remain emotionally detached from the work that I do. I could focus on my research, reporting findings, and not allow their implications to sink in too deeply. I was okay as long as I didn’t look at images of scorched animals, distressed farmers and ravaged landscapes long enough to feel the sting of it. My work felt clean, clinical, safely partitioned from my emotions. But being involved in a UN process reconfigures your worldview; it forces you to zoom out and take in the world as a whole. My chapter team alone spans scientists from Colombia to France, Russia to Cameroon, Israel to India. I’m lucky to form part of our team’s trans-Tasman contingent; the Australia–New Zealand alliance, solid as always.
As I roll out of bed on this dark winter’s morning, my nerves are shot: it’s been a hell of a year. But if I don’t get up, I’ll miss the opportunity to represent Australia’s scientific community in this global process. At the rate we’re going, by the time the next IPCC report comes out – likely around 2030 – the world will have blown the carbon budget required to achieve the Paris Agreement targets. In my darker moments, I fear that we may have already crossed an invisible threshold, pushing the planetary system past the point of no return. So as much as I need the rest, it’s time to haul myself out of bed and take one for the team.
* * *
As I jot down my task list in the notepad on my desk, I listen to the pre-dawn chorus – first the kookaburras, then the lorikeets, followed by the plaintive currawongs. By the time the meeting ends, my usual alarm clock – a huge flock of noisy corellas – has screeched overhead, heralding the start of a new day. Although I sometimes feel aggrieved by the terrible time zones of these meetings, more often than not I feel lucky to live in a landscape that still feels so alive, still part of a thriving ecosystem. Over 200 bird species make this pocket of northern New South Wales, Australia, their home. At these ungodly hours, nature thrives, reminding me that so much hangs in the balance in a country like mine. We are one of the planet’s most biodiverse, with more unique plant and animal species than anywhere else on Earth. Like Brazil, Papua New Guinea and Madagascar, Australia is a global biodiversity hotspot. As David Attenborough recently reminded us: ‘You are the keepers of an extraordinary section of the surface of this planet . . . what you say, what you do, really, really matters.’
United Nations member countries put forward nominations for 911 regional experts to compile the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report, all of us assessed by our contribution to published scientific research. From these nominations, 234 scientists from sixty-six countries were selected to serve as lead authors on the Working Group 1 report to provide the necessary expertise to conduct the assessment across a range of disciplines. Just over a quarter of us are women, with the southwest Pacific – which includes Australia – accounting for only 9 per cent of the voices at the table.
But no matter where we are from, all of us volunteer our time, working thousands of unpaid hours over the course of three relentlessly intense years, drafting technical summaries of complex topics including the causes of chronic drought, modelling sea level rise and changes in tropical monsoons. Our work goes out for two rounds of expert and government review – alongside countless internal checks – after which we face the epic task of responding to tens of thousands of reviewer comments and attending meetings across several time zones to make sure the revisions get done. In the end, our group will respond to 78,007 technical queries throughout the review process – all made publicly available in a database alongside the final report for complete transparency.
All of this happens against the background of our day jobs – generally, positions as research scientists and university lecturers in world-leading institutions – and the immovable challenges of domestic life. In Australia, the only funding is a small federal government travel allowance to cover economy flights, standard accommodation and basic meals associated with attending four compulsory in-person lead author meetings.
The first three involve long-haul flights to China, Canada and France for incredibly intense five-day meetings. The last session done, I catch the first evening flight to begin the long journey home, often through multiple international airports, while trying to make a dent in the mountain of non-IPCC email that accumulated during the week.
On the way home from our third meeting in France, a mix of anxiety and fatigue has my mind racing. I can’t sleep; I’m too overstimulated. I pull out my journal to capture the rush of ideas, page after page. The last thing I write that night still haunts me:
It’s extraordinary to realise that we are witnessing the great unravelling; the beginning of the end of things. I honestly never thought I’d live to see the start of what sometimes feels like the apocalypse. The Earth is struggling to maintain its equilibrium. It’s possible that we are now seeing a cascade of tipping points lurching into action as the momentum of instability takes hold and things start to come apart. I honestly don’t know what the future will bring.
When complete exhaustion sets in, I stare out the window, weeping at the enormity of the challenge we face. It’s a battle between despair and belief in the power of true global citizenry that I’ve just experienced.
* * *
When COVID-19 strikes, our fourth in-person meeting – slated for June 2020 in Chile – is cancelled and rapidly adapted into virtual form. Part of me welcomes the opportunity not to put my body through the punishment. But the gathering is replaced by more than a dozen online meetings over several months, often involving brutal time differences – all while I am teaching a new climatology course for 120 students that is suddenly forced to shift online as my university campus shuts down.
During one meeting, Cyclone Nisarga slams into western India – the strongest tropical cyclone to strike the Indian state of Maharashtra since 1891. Despite this, an author based there manages to log in, apologising for being late:
Hello everyone – sorry for the delay. The internet and electricity was totally down due to a cyclone that passed over Pune just now. I am trying to reconnect using mobile hot spot. The connection is weak and intermittent.
In light of the lived immediacy of these struggles, my own challenges feel insignificant.
The dedication shown by my fellow scientists is truly the stuff of legend. During the Australian summer of 2020–2021, as most people enjoy their Christmas holiday, climate scientists across the world work around the clock to complete this monumental climate change assessment during a global pandemic. For those of us from the Southern Hemisphere, it’s the third year in a row we’ve worked through our summer break. The fatigue that sets in is bone-deep. Sometimes I doze off in the middle of the day, waking fitfully from vivid dreams that leave me feeling trapped in a perpetual state of jet lag. Often, I slip into bed before sunset, wrecked, unable to do anything other than sleep.
Gruelling workloads aside, we all enjoy the cultural exchange that comes with being part of a team of scientists gathered from so many countries, working to compile the most comprehensive global stocktake of climate change humanly possible. My favourite lunch buddy is the lone delegate from Iceland with a name so unpronounceable that she graciously offers up a nickname. We communicate warmly with our eyes when words fail us. We figure out that we live about as far away from each other as is physically possible. Our mealtime chats revolve around melting glaciers, the complexities of modelling sea level rise and if Australia really has a proper winter.
Back in formal meetings, we spend hours listening to how the climate crisis is escalating all over the world. Warming deep in our oceans. Melting glaciers in densely populated lands. Rainfall patterns drifting away from continents, slipping towards the poles. We talk non-stop about real-time examples of accelerating warming already observed in our unique parts of the world. We worry about how quickly things are playing out, orders of magnitude faster than the natural processes of geologic and evolutionary time. The more I hear, the more I realise that the situation is far worse than most people can imagine. In truth, it’s also hard for me to fathom that our generation is likely to witness the destabilisation of the Earth’s climate; that we will be the last to see the world as it is today.
That’s what really keeps me up at night. I wonder if we may have already pushed the planetary system too far, unleashing a cascade of irreversible changes that have built such momentum we can now only watch as they unfold. All the latest models assessed in the IPCC report see us sail through the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C target in the early 2030s; that’s now just ten years away.
* * *
It was impossible to imagine what would unfold after our third lead author meeting in France in August 2019. After sweltering through an extreme European summer heatwave, I returned home to find much of Australia’s eastern seaboard engulfed in an unprecedented bushfire crisis, scarcely a week out of winter. The catastrophic conditions were the result of the hottest and driest year on record – the first time both national records were broken in the same year. Rainfall was a staggering 40 per cent below average across the entire country, with temperatures running 1.5°C warmer than the historical mean.
Close to 150 fires were raging as 98 per cent of New South Wales and 65 per cent of Queensland baked through one of the most punishing droughts in Australian history. Fire maps of the east coast lit up like a grotesque Christmas tree. Many were burning out of control as the relentlessly gusty winds grounded the firefighting aircraft needed to try and contain the blazes. Some regional towns that were already trucking in water to cope with the relentless drought now had fires bearing down on them.
For me, the worst were the wildfires in the World Heritage–listed rainforests of Lamington National Park in the Gold Coast hinterland of Queensland and Nightcap National Park on the north coast of New South Wales. These regions are part of the Gondwana Rainforests of Australia, an area that contains the largest remaining stands of subtropical rainforest in the world, as well as the most significant areas of warm temperate rainforest in the country. These usually moss-drenched forests are packed with the oldest elements of the world’s ferns and primitive plant families, dating back to the Jurassic era, some 200 million years ago. They are indescribably precious. Although these remarkable ecosystems have clung on since the age of the dinosaurs, searing heat and bone-dry conditions saw these usually lush forests turn into fuel.
These areas are close to my heart. The rainforests of northern New South Wales are where my husband spent much of his time growing up. Since we met over twenty years ago, he’s taken me to explore remnant patches of these primordial places he played in as a boy. Whenever we get a chance, we head for these relic forests, a reminder of a time when the Earth was still young. The blockades to protect the Terania Creek basin in Nightcap National Park from logging in 1979 were the first of their kind in the Western world. They went on to inspire the protests that saved the Franklin River in the Tasmanian wilderness during the early 1980s, which in turn led to the development of the first Green political party in the world. These extraordinary forests deep in the Australian rainforest helped birth the global environmental movement.
It’s where I go when I am burnt out and heartsick. They help me remember that the Earth is still alive, that there are areas worth saving. Perhaps more importantly, they remind me that these places still exist because humans cared enough to protect them. They reconnect me with what feels like the very best of humanity; something deeply profound, intergenerational.
By the time Australia’s Black Summer finally came to its horrific end, fire had torn through Terania Creek, along with 53 per cent of the last of these ancient Gondwana rainforests. When that news came through, I sat at my desk sobbing, knowing that these areas are likely to be lost forever. Something inside me broke.
That horrendous summer saw more than 3 billion animals incinerated or displaced by an unimaginable path of destruction, ripping through globally significant biodiversity hotspots across the country. Around 23 per cent of Australia’s forests burnt in a single bushfire season. The world saw images of terrified animals fleeing with their fur on fire, their bodies turned to ash. Those that survived faced starvation in the charred remains of their obliterated homes. The koala, Australia’s most emblematic species, lost so much of its habitat that it now faces extinction in the country’s most populous state of New South Wales as early as 2050. In February 2022, koalas in eastern Australia were officially added to the endangered species list, something I never imagined I’d witness in my lifetime.
But what really scares me is what Australia’s Black Summer says about things yet to come. In the aftermath, scientists analysed the conditions observed during the 2019–2020 fire season, concluding that ‘under a scenario where emissions continue to grow, such a year would be average by 2040 and exceptionally cool by 2060’. That is, the most extreme statistical outliers in today’s climate will become average conditions in just twenty years. Soon, searing temperatures over 50°C will become a regular feature of summer in Sydney and Melbourne, where around 40 per cent of the nation’s population lives.
Australians won’t be the only ones forced to endure searing heat: beyond 2°C of global warming, maximum summer temperatures will reach 50°C across all continents, with projected temperatures above 60°C in hotspots like Pakistan, Iraq and Saudi Arabia. By 2050, Madrid’s climate will resemble Marrakech’s climate today, London will feel like Barcelona, and Seattle more like San Francisco.
The latest climate models show that under a very high emissions pathway, global average temperatures warm as much as 3.3–5.7°C above pre-industrial levels by the end of this century, with a central estimate of 4.4°C. But because the planet is mostly covered in ocean that absorbs excess heat, thinking about global averages doesn’t give you a true sense of the warming that will occur over land, where people actually live. Most continental areas will warm well above the global mean. For example, under a worst-case scenario, average land temperatures along the eastern seaboard of North America are projected to rise by 6.5°C above pre-industrial levels by the end of the century, with all models simulating a range of 4.7–8.7°C. In northern European regions like the United Kingdom, average temperatures warm by 6.3°C, with projected temperatures ranging between 4.3 and 9.0°C by 2100. Even under an optimistic intermediate emissions scenario, average warming in both these areas, which house the great cities of New York and London, is 4.0°C by the end of the century. And these are just averages: extreme temperatures are far more pronounced, often changing twice as fast as the long-term mean.
Under a fossil fuel–intensive scenario, land areas of Australia are projected to warm between 4.0 and 7.0°C above pre-industrial levels by 2100, with a central estimate of 5.3°C. This level of heat will render large parts of the country uninhabitable. Such high levels of warming will profoundly alter not only Australia, but all life on Earth. Although Australians wear our badge of resilience with a hefty dose of national pride, scientists understand that some things in life, once gone, can never be replaced. There is only so much the system can take. If the new models are right, there is no way we can adapt to such catastrophic levels of warming.
* * *
As someone on the frontline of research on the climate crisis, I try to help people make sense of the latest results coming out of the scientific community. But when the new climate projections were published, I found it impossible to focus.
So, I wrote my way through it, and published a longform essay in July 2020. I’d been afraid to publish such a personal piece, fearing my colleagues would think less of me for sharing my emotional response to our work. But I took heart from a quote by Rachel Carson, ecologist and author of the seminal book Silent Spring, first published in 1962:
It is not half so important to know as to feel . . . once the emotions have been aroused – a sense of the beautiful, the excitement of the new and unknown, a feeling of sympathy, pity, admiration or love – then we wish for knowledge about the object of our emotional response. Once found, it has lasting meaning.
In other words, there is power and wisdom in our emotional response to our world. Until we are prepared to be moved by the profoundly tragic ways we treat the planet – and each other – our behaviour will never change.
As scientists, we are often quick to reach for more facts rather than grapple with the complexity of our emotions. Science can seem cold and complicated; scientists, detached and dull. But as the long history of humanity’s inability to respond to the climate crisis has shown us, processing information on a purely intellectual level just isn’t enough. I’ve come to realise that no amount of extra data or technical graphs is going to help people actually feel the grief of what we are facing. Although it’s not the accepted practice in our field, I felt compelled to share the immense loss I felt – not just as a scientist, but as a human being. Perhaps if I am honest about my own emotional response to our work, it might help others feel something too. In the words of American civil-rights activist Rosa Parks: ‘Knowing what must be done does away with fear.’
When my article was published, I received an email from an IPCC colleague in a far-flung corner of the world:
I’ve been deeply depressed since the meeting in Singapore . . . I almost lost my position here at the university because I could not care less about work knowing that we seem to be doomed. I just wanted to sleep and do nothing . . . I then realized I was depressed and . . . on a kind of autopilot, just doing the mere essential (of course that also included fulfilling the IPCC deadline in January) but everything looks black and void . . . and then I read your article, and I realize that I am not the only one in despair given how little time we have to make radical changes, and realizing that people are not keen at all to do so. I still worry, it’s still on my mind most of the time, but I can function somewhat normally now. I wonder how many of us feel like that, and are able to actually say it?
It’s a long-held myth that a credible scientist should be devoid of human emotion, presenting our work rationally, without commentary. Perhaps it’s part of the reason why the public discussion around climate change has been so dominated by the political right across the developed world – the environmental, social and cultural costs of capitalism have been dismissed in the name of economic progress for far, far too long. Given that humanity is now facing an existential threat of planetary proportions, and scientists are the people who really know exactly what’s at stake, shouldn’t that logically include acknowledging our sense of despair, anger, grief and frustration? Why are medical doctors praised for a good bedside manner, while climate scientists are dismissed as ‘alarmist’ if we express our deep concern about the state of the world? Would anyone ridicule an intensive care nurse for feeling distressed if someone in their care died on their watch? Is it possible to witness the death of the Great Barrier Reef – the largest living organism on the planet – and not feel wild with desperation at the thought of it all?
* * *
My involvement in the IPCC process has been life changing. It’s been overwhelming to get a complete sense of how the planet’s climate is changing – on all levels, at all timescales, all over the world. The scientists I work with are aware that we might only know we’ve crossed critical thresholds in hindsight. The warning signs of tipping points are all there: the rapid melting of polar regions, the freshening of the North Atlantic Ocean, and widespread fires in the Amazon. Now, more than ever, we need more scientists on the frontline to sound the alarm, no matter how uncomfortable we may feel.
We know from the geologic record that 1.5 to 2°C of warming is enough to seriously reconfigure the Earth’s climate. In the past, such changes triggered substantial long-term melting in Greenland and Antarctica, unleashing 6–13 metres of global sea level rise lasting thousands of years. With the 1.2°C of global warming we’ve experienced so far, an alarming proportion of the world’s coral reefs have already experienced large-scale die-off. Between 2016 and 2017, the Great Barrier Reef lost approximately 50 per cent of its shallow water corals following unprecedented back-to-back mass bleaching events. As there are long gaps in reef-wide monitoring, it is still unknown exactly how much more died during the mass bleaching that struck the reef again in March 2020, the most widespread event ever recorded in the region. And then, to the horror of the scientific community, in March 2022 yet another mass bleaching engulfed the beleaguered reef – the fourth since 2016. It is clear that the largest living organism on the planet is in terminal decline. It’s truly the stuff of nightmares.
Even if it were still geophysically possible to achieve the most ambitious goal of limiting warming to 1.5°C, we will still see the destruction of 70–90 per cent of coral reefs that exist today. With 2°C of warming, 99 per cent of tropical coral reefs disappear. An entire component of the Earth’s biosphere – our planetary life-support system – will be destroyed. The domino effect on the 25 per cent of all marine life that depends on these areas will be profound and immeasurable.
Right now, current policies in place today will lead to 1.9–3.7°C of warming by the end of the century, with a best estimate of 2.6°C. This represents a catastrophic overshooting of the Paris Agreement targets, which were specifically developed to avoid ‘dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system’. If countries fully implement their long-term net-zero emissions targets, this best-case scenario could see global warming stabilise between 1.4 and 2.8°C by 2100, with 2°C considered most likely. The problem is there are no guarantees that countries will honour their commitments, as only fourteen of the 196 parties have formalised net-zero targets into legislation, meaning the majority of pledges are still not legally enforceable. To have a chance of limiting warming to 1.5°C by 2100, global emissions need to halve by 2030. This means the world needs to more than double its current emissions-reduction pledges to restrict warming to 1.5°C.
We have a hell of a job ahead of us.
* * *
Sometimes I’m unsure of how best to live my life in the face of the catastrophe that is currently unfolding. Between IPCC, research, teaching, and grieving for our planet, sometimes I feel I have nothing more to give.
As coronavirus lockdowns lift and national parks reopen, the first thing we do is pack the car and head for the rainforest. Driving up the windy access road of the Border Ranges National Park feels like going to check in with family after a disaster – we’re afraid of what we might find. As we stand at our favourite lookout, I find it hard to see through tears. My husband pulls me in close and whispers, ‘It’s still here. It’s still here.’ This immense valley drenched in brilliant green; the rainforest we love so much.
These magnificent forests have survived for millions of years. My hope is that they can hang on, that the cavalry is on its way. As a climate scientist, I am doing everything I possibly can to respond to the distress signals from our natural world. If I live to look back at this troubled time, I want to say that I did all that I could, that I was on the right side of history.
* * *
After reading David Attenborough’s A Life on Our Planet, his moving ‘witness statement’ of observing the decline of the natural world for nearly seventy years as a documentary filmmaker, I realised that climate scientists also have an important story to tell. This extraordinary 96-year-old, a man who has probably seen more of the planet than anyone who has ever lived, someone who has inspired generations of people to connect with the wonders of nature, is using the time he has left to bring the urgency of the climate emergency to the public. He cannot be silent knowing what he knows is at stake.
It’s hard to care about things you cannot see.
So I’m writing this book to provide you with an insider’s account of the latest research and what it is like being a scientist involved in the IPCC; the UN’s peak body responsible for assessing global climate change. When IPCC reports are released, they are often filtered through the media and a range of other non-expert commentators. We might get a short quote in a news article or, if we are lucky, some airtime on the radio or television, but scientists very rarely get a chance to tell our stories, in our own words. Some of us try to write technical explainers or media releases to share our latest research with the public as quickly as possible, but usually we are so tied up doing the actual science, and we don’t often have the training or the time to communicate the implications of our research. Fewer still have the courage to publicly confess the emotional toll our work is increasingly having on our lives.
But after contributing to the latest IPCC assessment report, it became alarmingly clear that people outside of the scientific community honestly don’t appreciate the scale of the crisis that is currently unfolding. Our science is not translated accurately or quickly enough to reflect just how serious the situation has become. There are many reasons for this, but I’ll outline just a few. Because IPCC assessments must be as objective and thorough as possible, our key messages are often buried deep in technical detail that we agonise over endlessly (trust me, I never want to hear about the role of aerosols in cloud microphysics ever again). As a result, it’s often hard for people to grasp the true extent of the problem, or they end up with a skewed version of reality when our results are inadvertently misinterpreted or actively misconstrued.
Very often the IPCC’s most important messages are lost in translation. Our science can be dense and is written with so much nuance that it’s sometimes hard to understand what we are trying to say. This is because the science itself is incredibly complex, and we need to phrase our findings using ‘uncertainty language’ that must remain solidly anchored in the evidence base. Each sentence that appears in the final report is made up of qualitative ‘confidence statements’ that take into account the type, quality, amount and consistency of evidence, and the overall agreement, or consensus, that can be reached based on the best available science. So if a research area is still emerging as new observations or theoretical developments come to hand, an IPCC assessment may report a statement as ‘low confidence’ even if there is a high level of agreement based on the available evidence to date, simply because there may only be a few studies published on a particular topic. It doesn’t mean that the underlying science isn’t solid, it just means that it’s an active research area on the cutting edge of the field.
To further complicate things, alongside our confidence ratings, the IPCC also provides ‘likelihood statements’, which are quantitative assessments based on statistical analyses or model results. Essentially this process assigns a probability of a given statement being true. For example, the IPCC considers something to be ‘unlikely’ if it corresponds to a probability range of 0–33 per cent, calculated from the best available data. For a statement to be considered ‘very likely’ we are looking for a probability of 90–100 per cent – something that sits well outside the realm of being a statistical fluke. And because we are a group of obsessive perfectionists, of course there are ten tiers of likelihood statements to cover all bases.
It’s important to understand that low-likelihood scenarios still pose a very real threat – it’s just that the risks can’t be predicted clearly based on currently available evidence. These scenarios may include well-understood physical processes, like a large volcanic eruption or ocean dynamics, but might be statistically rare or unprecedented in short observational records, or difficult to model. The IPCC classifies these as ‘low-likelihood, high-impact’ scenarios based on what we understand about the science right now. But if things play out consistently with what we know so far about, for example, the speed of abrupt climate change seen in geological records, the impacts on society could be catastrophic. For the first time, this IPCC assessment goes to great lengths to explain that these high-risk scenarios cannot be ruled out. It clearly states that there is an increased chance of substantially larger global or regional changes than the ‘very likely’ range reported for future projections, particularly under higher levels of global warming.
As you can see, understanding climate change is a little bit like trying to complete a jigsaw puzzle without all the pieces available. Everyone is working incredibly hard to place the pieces we do have, but science takes time. Its measured pace is in direct conflict with the relentless speed of the news cycle. This means that the loudest voices – which are not necessarily the most informed, or even sane – often dominate public commentary. Our work becomes politicised by those not constrained by the professional ethics and rigour of our discipline, resulting in speculative discussions on complex topics that many scientists aren’t comfortable covering. Hence our use of carefully crafted uncertainty language, which is at odds with the fast and loose approach others are willing to take. Sensational clickbait always seems to win.
We live in an era when reliable information matters more than ever. As I see it, our messages are ignored by the public not because people don’t care, but because most people don’t have a science background, or find it challenging to stay engaged in a technical debate that feels so far removed from the reality of their lives. The discussion around climate change has become so divisive that it’s hard for most people to feel like they can be part of the conversation. It’s hard to know what’s true or who to trust, and eventually it all becomes too overwhelming, so we switch off. Meanwhile, all over the world, elected politicians are making fateful decisions right now that will shape the entire course of humanity’s future. In the end, even those with political and economic power aren’t even aware of how bad things have become. When we tune out, we squander the most powerful thing we have to influence the system – our vote.
During my time working on the Sixth Assessment Report, it dawned on me that this IPCC assessment is probably the scientific community’s last chance to really make a difference. If our work doesn’t convince this generation of political leaders that we must stabilise the Earth’s climate immediately, we will lock in an irreversibly apocalyptic future. I realised that the most important thing I can do right now is not write another research paper, apply for more funding or teach another climatology course – the most important thing I can do right now is share everything I’ve learned as far and as widely as I possibly can. I’ve distilled our key findings down as simply as possible so you can clearly see that what we fear is now on the horizon. I want you to understand that the extreme conditions you have been experiencing in your part of the world are not only happening where you live, but are part of a global trend that has experts very, very worried.
Climate change is real and it is here, and it’s not going away. We need your help.
Just like a doctor diagnosing a critically ill patient, as a climate scientist I face the terrible task of being the bearer of bad news. It is akin to asking each person to sit with the horror and grief of the prospect of losing the very life force that miraculously sustains us all. I need to take you by the hand and gently ask you to stay with the gravity of what’s at stake and what it means for your future. But just like a serious health condition, if symptoms are caught early enough, appropriate treatment can avoid a condition progressing into a terminal situation. If we intervene before it is too late, there are things that can be done to lessen the impacts. Tumours can be removed, lifestyles can be changed, lives can be saved.
When it comes to the planet, we need to understand that what we do collectively right now will shape the future course of humanity. You only have to hear a statistic like 90 per cent of seabirds alive today contain plastic – a by-product of the fossil fuel industry – in their guts to know that humanity has lost the way. It’s fair to say that we have completely overrun the Earth; it desperately needs our active protection to stay alive. We have urgent choices to make about how much will be lost to future generations. We must choose what we are willing to save.
* * *
I’m guessing you’ve picked up this book because you already know that our world is changing. Maybe you are trying to come to terms with what climate change means for your life right now. Perhaps you’ve lived through a traumatic event that impacted you in a personal way: your house burnt down, your family was displaced by floodwaters, or a place you love is disappearing before your eyes. Maybe you grew up loving summer, but these days, the heat outside scares you – you know a shift in the wind can destroy everything you hold dear. The world needs your resilience and insight to help guide us through loss.
You might be a parent and want to understand the future your kids are now facing. Maybe you, too, find yourself weeping watching David Attenborough documentaries because you realise the little ones in your life will never experience the world the way you did when you were growing up. You want to know what you can do to protect their future, to try and save what’s left. You know that generational change starts at home. We need your love and compassion to remind us why we cannot fail.
Or perhaps you are a young person who already understands how serious this is. You’ve taken to the streets in solidarity with millions from your generation, fuelling the social movement sweeping the world. You want to connect with others who care about the future of our planet, and arm yourself with enough accurate science to pass on wherever you can. You probably feel angry with the people who let things get so bad; trust me, I do too. The world needs your spirit and drive to help redirect the course of our future.
Maybe you’ve been on board for decades – you might be a business leader, an environmentalist, a community activist, a politician or a media professional – and you just want someone to clearly step you through the highlights of the latest IPCC report. You are wondering if this will be the moment when things really change, when the momentum you’ve been building for so long will finally tip the system. Maybe you need a reminder that all the transformational struggles throughout human history have passed through the gates of despair on the way to victory. That all revolutions seem impossible until they become inevitable. We need your wisdom and inspiration to help us hold on.
Or maybe you are a creative, someone who feels things so deeply that it hurts. You care but are overwhelmed by how hard everything feels sometimes. You don’t know what you can do as a musician, an artist or a writer to stop climate change, but you know how to express yourself in ways that help other people feel things too. You remind the rest of us that there is still so much beauty in the world, that we must allow ourselves to be moved enough to save it. We need your sensitivity and imagination to help us reclaim our soul. Promise you will stay with me until the end.
If you are a scientist, a researcher or a teacher trying to make sense of how you’ve been feeling about work lately, it might seem like you are trying to hold back the tide in your personal and professional life. Some days you sense you’re fighting a losing battle. Other times, you know you are changing the world, one careful step at a time. My hope is that you find solace in these pages – a reminder that the work you do is not invisible. What you care about really, really matters, even if others can’t see that yet. Your dedication and vision will be valued by generations to come.
No matter who you are, above all, you are ready to connect your head with your heart. You are devastated by what you see and can no longer turn away. You want to do what you can, where you can, with the time you have left. This book is an invitation to reclaim our shared humanity at this transformative time in history, wherever you are in the world. You want to survive the journey through the heartland of your grief and create a meaningful life on the other side. You want to be a part of the group of people who cared enough to try.
Wherever you are on this path, I want to offer you my company, to let you know that you are not alone. I am sharing my personal response to facing this unimaginable dilemma, and how I’ve tried to navigate my own despair. I want you to know that the fear you feel is rational. So is your pain. I understand the science can often be complicated and intimidating; I’ll do my best to make it digestible for you. I will shine a light into my world and provide insights I’ve gained from being among a group of the world’s leading climate scientists trying to avert disaster at this critical moment in human history.
I definitely don’t have all of the answers – I’m navigating this radical transformation of the world just like you – but I’ll draw together everything I’ve found helpful to contribute to your conversations. You’ll see that the solutions we need to live sustainably on our planet already exist right now – we just need the social movement and the political will to create a better world. I hope that this book will transform your feelings of grief and anger into action and a genuine sense of hope. I want you to see how you can contribute your talents to help create our new world, no matter your circumstances, or how small your efforts might feel. All any of us can ever do is show up and do what we can with what we’ve got.
Like all great social movements, everyone, everywhere, is needed. It’s time for our business leaders, our musicians, our filmmakers, our politicians, our teachers, our families – all fellow humans – to step up and help reimagine a future where beauty and heartbreak strike a tolerable balance. It’s time to get behind leaders who will act with courage and vision that future generations will be proud of. There have always been people across the ages who have risen to face the great challenges of their time and succeeded against all odds. The question is, do you want to be part of the legacy that restores our faith in humanity?
Although some of what I have to say will sometimes be hard to hear, I want you to know that all is not lost – there is still so much worth saving.
How bad we let things get is still up to us – the apocalypse is not a done deal.
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About the author
Dr Joëlle Gergis is an award-winning climate scientist and writer at the Australian National University. She served as a lead author for the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report and is the author of Sunburnt Country: The History and Future of Climate Change in Australia. Joëlle has also contributed chapters to The Climate Book by Greta Thunberg, and Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility, edited by Rebecca Solnit …
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