By Robert F. Dodge, Guest Columnist
This year marks the 49th anniversary of the first Earth Day. This comes 50 years after the Santa Barbara, California, oil spills, which were instrumental in the declaration of the first Earth Day. The fate of our planet remains threatened by two inextricably connected threats, that of climate change and nuclear war. We cannot pretend to be concerned about our environment if we are not simultaneously concerned about the destruction of the planet by nuclear war.
Fortunately, on this anniversary there are two bold initiatives attempting to deal with these simultaneous climate threats. These are the “Green New Deal” and “Back from the Brink” movements. Realizing the connection, what is necessary is the political will and courage to deal with these real and present dangers we face.
Two important scientific papers established these threats:
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) October 2018 climate report identifies a 12-year window, until 2030, to contain global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degree Fahrenheit).
The Physicians for Social Responsibility 2013 Nuclear Famine Report, which identifies the catastrophic climate affects following a limited regional nuclear war between India and Pakistan using less than 0.5 percent of the global nuclear arsenals putting at risk of starvation more than 25 perecent of the world’s population. Forthcoming studies this year will demonstrate an even greater risk.
The connection between climate change and nuclear war is real and growing. With increasing competition for natural resources, global drought and lack of access to clean drinking water, we see major conflict developing. This is exemplified in the first climate war occurring in Syria resulting in the largest mass migration in history. This has brought the United States and Russia, the world’s largest nuclear armed nations, into military opposition with many close calls.