60 MINUTES: SCIENTIST SAYS GLOBAL WARMING HAS CAUSED MORE
INTENSE HURRICANES LIKE KATRINA
Thu Feb 16 2006 12:27:11 2006
Rising
ocean temperatures have increased the intensity of hurricanes like the one that
decimated New Orleans, says a scientist in a 60 MINUTES report on global
warming. Bob Correll, one of the world?s foremost authorities on climate
change, appears in Scott Pelley?s report to be broadcast on 60 MINUTES Sunday,
Feb. 19 (7:00-8:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.
?The
oceans in the Northern Hemisphere are the warmest they?ve been on record,? says
Correll. ?When they get up in that temperature, they spin off hurricanes?.The
one thing we can say with a fairly high degree of confidence is the severity of
the storms?these cyclonic events like hurricanes and cyclones?they?re going to
be more severe,? he tells Pelley.
Correll
is interviewed in Greenland above the Arctic Circle, where the rising
temperature has caused the glacial ice in place for eons to steadily recede for
the last few decades. ?This is bell weather, a barometer?.the warning that
things are coming,? says Correll, who also predicts lowlands will be inundated
by waters from the melting glaciers in the future. ?In 10 years here in the
Arctic, we see what the rest of the planet will see in 25 or 35 years from
now,? he says. ?The entire planet is out of balance,? says Correll.
Whether
the change in temperature is a natural or man-made phenomenon has been a matter
of debate, but Paul Mayewski of the University of Maine says the proof that man
is responsible is in the ancient ice at the top of the world. There is evidence
of high levels of ?greenhouse gases,? like carbon dioxide from the burning of
fossil fuels that contribute to warming the earth?s surface, in the core samples
of ice he collected in Greenland. ?We haven?t seen CO2 levels like this in hundreds of thousands of years, if not
millions of years,? says Mayewski. ?It all points to something that has
changed and something that has impacted the system which wasn?t doing it more
than 100 years ago,? says Mayewski. ?It?s human activity.?
The
Bush Administration spends $5 billion a year on climate change research but the
president refuses to sign a treaty to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Correll
says the sooner we curb the emissions, the better for the generations to come.
Even total cessation of the burning of fossil fuels will not stop the warming
immediately and to continue burning them will affect the planet into the
distant future ? perhaps thousands of years. ?I try to tell [policymakers]
exactly what we know scientifically. The science is, I believe, unassailable,?
Correll tells Pelley.
Developing...
The Drudge Report does not own, operate or maintain DrudgeReportArchives.com and is not responsible for it in any way.