# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails … A to
Z!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/01/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-%e2%80%a6-a-to-z/)
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Svante August Arrhenius, Swedish (1859 – 1927), foresaw climate change.
**“A is for Arrhenius”**
.
[Article by Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker
Magazine](https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/elizabeth-kolbert), November
28, 2022
Svante Arrhenius was, by nature, an optimist. He believed that science should
— and could — be accessible to all. In 1891, he got his !rst teaching job, at
an experimental university in Stockholm called the Högskola. That same year,
he founded the Stockholm Physics Society, which met every other Saturday
evening. For a fee of one Swedish crown, anyone could join. Among the
society’s earliest members was a Högskola student named Sofia Rudbeck, who was
described by a contemporary as both “an excellent chemist” and “a ravishing
beauty.” Arrhenius began writing her poetry, and soon the two wed.
Physics Society meetings consisted of lectures on the latest scientific
developments, many delivered by Arrhenius himself, followed by discussions
that often lasted well into the night. The topics ranged widely, from
aeronautics to volcanology. The society devoted several sessions to
considering the instruments that would be needed by Salomon August Andrée,
another early member of the group, who had decided to try to reach the North
Pole via balloon. (Whatever the quality of his instruments, Andrée’s voyage
would result in his death and the death of his two companions.)
A question that particularly interested the Physics Society was the origin of
the ice ages. All over Sweden lay signs of the glaciers that had, for vast
stretches of time, buried the country: rocks with parallel scrapings; strange,
sinuous piles of gravel; huge boulders that had been transported far from
their source. But what had caused the great ice sheets to descend, carrying
all before them? And then what had caused them to retreat, allowing the rivers
to "ow once again and the forests to return? In 1893, the society debated
various theories that had been proposed, including one linking the ice ages to
slight variations in the Earth’s orbit. The following year, Arrhenius came up
with a different—and, he thought, better—idea: carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide, he knew, had curious heat-trapping properties. In the
atmosphere, it allowed visible light to pass through, but it absorbed the
longer-wave radiation that the Earth was constantly emitting to space. What
if, Arrhenius speculated, the amount of CO2 in the air had varied? Could that
explain the glaciers’ ebb and flow?
The math involved in testing this theory went far beyond what was possible at
the time. Arrhenius didn’t have a calculator, let alone a computer. He lacked
crucial information about which wavelengths, exactly, CO2 absorbs. The climate
system, meanwhile, is immensely complicated, with feedback loops nestled
within feedback loops.
Arrhenius, who would later win a Nobel Prize for an unrelated discovery,
plunged ahead anyway. On Christmas Eve, 1894, he began constructing a climate
model — the world’s first. He assembled temperature data from around the globe
and made ingenious use of a set of measurements that had been taken a decade
earlier by an American astronomer, Samuel Pierpont Langley. (Langley had
invented a device — a bolometer — for gauging infrared radiation, and had used
it to determine the temperature of the moon.) Arrhenius performed thousands of
computations —perhaps tens of thousands — and often labored over this task for
fourteen hours a day.
He was still calculating away as his marriage fell apart. In September of
1895, Rudbeck moved out. In November, without having seen Arrhenius again, she
gave birth to their son. The following month, Arrhenius finished his work. “I
should certainly not have undertaken these tedious calculations if an
extraordinary interest had not been connected with them,” he wrote.
Arrhenius believed that he had unravelled the mystery of the ice ages, a
riddle that had “hitherto proved most difficult to interpret.” He was at least
partly right: ice ages are the product of a complex interplay of forces,
including wobbles in the Earth’s orbit and changes in atmospheric CO2.
His model turned out to have another use as well. All across Europe and North
America, coal was being shovelled into furnaces that were bellowing out carbon
dioxide. By thickening the atmospheric blanket that warmed the Earth, humans
must, Arrhenius reasoned, be altering the climate. He calculated that, if the
amount of carbon dioxide in the air were to double, then global temperatures
would rise between three and four degrees Celsius. A few quadrillion
computations later, vastly more advanced climate models predict that doubling
CO2 will push temperatures up between 2.5 and four degrees Celsius, meaning
that Arrhenius’s pen-and-paper estimate was, to an uncanny degree, on target.
Arrhenius thought that the future he had conjured would be delightful. “Our
descendants,” he predicted, would live happier lives “under a warmer sky.” The
prospect was, in any event, distant; doubling atmospheric CO2 would, he
reckoned, take humanity three thousand years.
It’s easy now to poke fun at Arrhenius for his sunniness. The doubling
threshold could be reached within decades, and the results are apt to be
disastrous. But who among us is any different? Here we all are, watching
things fall apart. And yet, deep down, we don’t believe it.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/01/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-%e2%80%a6-a-to-z/>