Subject: WAR & GLOBAL RESOURCE CONCERNS ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Comments: The 1990 RPA encouraged us to build our awareness of global resource concerns and improve our scientific knowledge. The Persian Gulf war has heightened our sensitivity on both fronts. 2 pages follow. Dve. -------========X========------- January 24, 1991 The Environmental Impact of Persian Gulf Oil Fires: Polarization in the Scientific Community This past week the world stood still, monitoring news about each incoming Iraqi SCUD missile, fearing chemical warfare attacks on Israel and Saudi Arabia. Even as people continue to wait for such an attack, with gas masks in place, another horror - perhaps even much greater - looms on the horizon: massive oil well and refinery fires. Over the weekend Saddam Hussein's troops set fire to the first oil wells and storage facilities in Kuwait. Will these fires will have major environmental effects, in both the near- and long-term? Members of the scientific community are polarized in their answers. The Doomsdayers At a world climate conference last December, Abdullah Toukan, scientific advisor to King Hussein of Jordan, suggested that setting fire to Kuwaiti oil wells could create a 900-mile-diameter cloud of soot covering almost all of the Persian Gulf. He suggested that the inferno would advance the onset of global warming by 30 years. Similar warnings were issued by the environmental group, "Friends of the Earth." Toukan warned that short-term effects would include the dissemination of hydrogen sulfide gas southward over Saudi Arabia - with possible impacts to humans worse than the mustard gas the Iraqis have stockpiled. But there is more. Within a year, some say, there might be a worldwide cooling if the clouds reach the upper atmosphere. Carl Sagan and other noted astronomers have guessed that major fires, like those created from detonating 1200 oil wells could result in a "year without summer," similar to the year after the Tambora volcano exploded in Indonesia in 1816. In the wake of that historic explosion, there were widespread crop failures extending to crops here in the US. There is reason to believe that there would again be massive crop failures should such events unfold, and dust clouds be drawn up into the upper atmosphere. The Naysayers Many disagree with the doomsdayers. Pentagon advisors have discounted the possibility of such global near-term effects, basing their predictions on models that forecast chiefly localized consequences, with the clouds retained in the lower atmosphere. The London Economist also dismisses major near-term concerns about global warming, claiming that "[p]eace-loving greens (and monarchs) exaggerate." "Burning oil wells could do a lot of harm, giving off global warming carbon dioxide. But the daily amount would probably not exceed the output of Los Angeles, which burns some 2 million barrels of oil a day." The Economist left the short-term cooling debate up for grabs, but suggested that most likely only a small amount of dust and sand would be catapulted into the upper atmosphere. Further, they guessed that the fires in the Gulf would be relatively short-lived. Quoting the president of an American company retained to manage fire-fighting in the Gulf, the Economist noted: "'It would be months, not years before the fires would all be controlled.' 'We would control the biggest blowouts first, so that we would be dealing with a declining amount of wells each day.'" The Rest of Us In a world where there is widespread and increasing disagreement in the scientific community on such important matters, it is apparent that strategic and tactical decisions must be made in the face of great uncertainty and very high risk. Military strategists and politicians must attempt to err on the side of safety, and develop plans that will minimize harm both to the environment and to the inhabitants thereof. In developing these plans we must be prepared for contingencies and be ready to adapt our plans to emergent circumstance. Those of us who manage the resources of the planet have similar responsibilities. The consequences of action in the Persian Gulf are acute and near-term, as well as long-term and cumulative - and rightly have the attention of our nation and world for now. But not many days ago, the actions of resource managers in the US Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management had the country's attention - and will again. Like the Persian Gulf crisis, the crisis in resource management worldwide has long-term and cumulative effects. And the two crises are intertwined in cumulative effect on the earth. In both crises, we should be taking stock of probable consequences of action, and developing our plans (contingency plans) accordingly. We need to better understand the widening gulf of opinion in the scientific community. Increasingly, we will be forced to act in settings of high uncertainty and high risk, with members of the scientific community - these venerable experts to whom we would have entrusted our lives not too many years ago - lined up on all sides of pressing issues. Dave Iverson..