Post by KNOWTHIS on May 22, 2007 11:28:49 GMT -5
www.hutchnews.com/news/regional/stories/dirty051907.shtml
Don Worster stands with his back to a video screen turned gray with an ominous 1930's image of dark dust clouds.
The elder University of Kansas history professor looks into the young faces of students seated in the campus auditorium.
He poses a challenge to them: Kansas recovered from the Dust Bowl, but will it heed the lessons from that environmental disaster?
Kansans today are mining groundwater just as they are mining fossil fuels.
By 2020, some two-thirds of the irrigated acreage in Kansas will no longer enjoy a reliable water supply, state officials predict.
"That's a mere 13 years away," warns Worster, KU's Hall distinguished professor of American history and a Hutchinson native.
Seven decades since the "Dirty Thirties" buried farms in silt and scattered topsoil from the Great Plains to the Atlantic, today's signals from nature - the abundant evidence of climate change - should be spurring dialogue and action among Kansans, Worster said.
International scientists predict a warming planet could bring long-term drought and economic fall-out in a region now consuming water far beyond sustainability.
Meanwhile, Kansans burn more and more of the coal and oil that help fuel climate change.
Human and economic loss
In the early part of the 20th Century, dust storms swept through the High Plains, leaving farms buried in silt. The ecological nightmare came after years of plowing up fragile grassland for economic benefit, Worster said in his recent speech, "Feeling the Heat: Global warming and the Great Plains."
Today, the state's pursuit of wealth through coal-fired electricity poses a similar problem, he contends. Power plants' carbon dioxide releases are contributing to global warming.
His words echoed what the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a multi-national panel of scientists, announced in April.
North America will face more severe storms with human and economic loss, the report states.
It can expect more hurricanes, floods, droughts, heat waves and wildfires, it said. Coasts will give way to rising sea levels.
Notable in Midwest farm country, the short-term expectations are for crop yield increases of 5 percent to 20 percent from a longer growing season.
But that will quickly decline if temperatures rise by 7.2 degrees late in the century, the IPCC concludes.
'Matter of faith'
It has been 70 years since the Dust Bowl's temperatures rose as high as 120 degrees some days. Worster wonders whether Kansans in 70 years will see the same.
"If these climate predictions are right, we're going to see a hotter, drier climate without a water source," Worster said. "We've used it up."
He recalled a conversation with a member of the state's board of agriculture a few years back.
The elder farmer's approach to intensive irrigation was one of complacency, Worster said.
" 'So what? My kids don't want to be here anyway,' " the man told him.
"Many realize their children won't be here to farm," Worster said, "so why worry about a resource that's not going to be here?"
But Worster senses people might be waking up. He is willing to hit the speaker's trail and address groups across the state about the issue.
"We have to assume this is a mining mentality. The old coalmine towns, they disappeared. But some were remade though American ingenuity. Aspen, Colorado, is a former mining town."
What will happen to Kansas' signature places, its small farming towns, he said, is up to Kansans today.
"This comes down to a matter of faith ... in human rationality," he said. "People are pretty innovative, creating a pretty good life on a very difficult planet."
Home on the range?
As for the predictions for the planet's future: "Most of us in Kansas think it won't be a problem for us," Worster said. "Maybe in the Netherlands or Bangladesh ... but not here in the 'Garden of the World' as we once called ourselves."
Higher temperatures mean less soil moisture, however, as evaporation rates climb. When large-scale irrigation ends, the Great Plains could shift back to dry prairie or to dryland farms, which probably won't draw the same level of income, Worster said.
The elder University of Kansas history professor looks into the young faces of students seated in the campus auditorium.
He poses a challenge to them: Kansas recovered from the Dust Bowl, but will it heed the lessons from that environmental disaster?
Kansans today are mining groundwater just as they are mining fossil fuels.
By 2020, some two-thirds of the irrigated acreage in Kansas will no longer enjoy a reliable water supply, state officials predict.
"That's a mere 13 years away," warns Worster, KU's Hall distinguished professor of American history and a Hutchinson native.
Seven decades since the "Dirty Thirties" buried farms in silt and scattered topsoil from the Great Plains to the Atlantic, today's signals from nature - the abundant evidence of climate change - should be spurring dialogue and action among Kansans, Worster said.
International scientists predict a warming planet could bring long-term drought and economic fall-out in a region now consuming water far beyond sustainability.
Meanwhile, Kansans burn more and more of the coal and oil that help fuel climate change.
Human and economic loss
In the early part of the 20th Century, dust storms swept through the High Plains, leaving farms buried in silt. The ecological nightmare came after years of plowing up fragile grassland for economic benefit, Worster said in his recent speech, "Feeling the Heat: Global warming and the Great Plains."
Today, the state's pursuit of wealth through coal-fired electricity poses a similar problem, he contends. Power plants' carbon dioxide releases are contributing to global warming.
His words echoed what the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a multi-national panel of scientists, announced in April.
North America will face more severe storms with human and economic loss, the report states.
It can expect more hurricanes, floods, droughts, heat waves and wildfires, it said. Coasts will give way to rising sea levels.
Notable in Midwest farm country, the short-term expectations are for crop yield increases of 5 percent to 20 percent from a longer growing season.
But that will quickly decline if temperatures rise by 7.2 degrees late in the century, the IPCC concludes.
'Matter of faith'
It has been 70 years since the Dust Bowl's temperatures rose as high as 120 degrees some days. Worster wonders whether Kansans in 70 years will see the same.
"If these climate predictions are right, we're going to see a hotter, drier climate without a water source," Worster said. "We've used it up."
He recalled a conversation with a member of the state's board of agriculture a few years back.
The elder farmer's approach to intensive irrigation was one of complacency, Worster said.
" 'So what? My kids don't want to be here anyway,' " the man told him.
"Many realize their children won't be here to farm," Worster said, "so why worry about a resource that's not going to be here?"
But Worster senses people might be waking up. He is willing to hit the speaker's trail and address groups across the state about the issue.
"We have to assume this is a mining mentality. The old coalmine towns, they disappeared. But some were remade though American ingenuity. Aspen, Colorado, is a former mining town."
What will happen to Kansas' signature places, its small farming towns, he said, is up to Kansans today.
"This comes down to a matter of faith ... in human rationality," he said. "People are pretty innovative, creating a pretty good life on a very difficult planet."
Home on the range?
As for the predictions for the planet's future: "Most of us in Kansas think it won't be a problem for us," Worster said. "Maybe in the Netherlands or Bangladesh ... but not here in the 'Garden of the World' as we once called ourselves."
Higher temperatures mean less soil moisture, however, as evaporation rates climb. When large-scale irrigation ends, the Great Plains could shift back to dry prairie or to dryland farms, which probably won't draw the same level of income, Worster said.