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The
Ireland of legend may
become just - more of a
legend and less of a
reality. While
climate change is global,
Ireland seems to be
suffering changes faster
and more harsh than many
other parts of the world.
Increased temperatures
and record-breaking
rainfall are threatening
to turn the Emerald Isle
brown and bring
landslides of
oversaturated marsh down
across the landscape.
This
time the invader is not
Roman or German or
British but environmental
and as they have done in
the past, the Irish are
prepared to fight for
their way of life.
Ireland's Green Landscape
Threatened by Climate
Change
Irish-Americans can play
a role in avoiding the
worst effects
WASHINGTON and DUBLIN,
Ireland, March 13
/PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- Ireland's
rich, green scenery may
fade to brown, its potato
crop may again whither,
and the island's classic
soft rains may turn harsh
if climate change
continues unabated, a new
report says. Heavy rains
in some parts of the
island could lead to
serious erosion. And bog
bursts -- when masses of
peat slide down slopes
like a California
mudslide -- are expected
to be more common.
Changes have already
hit Ireland, with mean
temperatures over the
last two decades rising
at a rate much higher
than the global average
for the period. Rainfall
in Donegal is up 30
percent over the last
century.
Despite their
findings, the report's
authors suggest that the
Irish should focus on
what still exists: a
green, pristine
landscape.
"St. Patrick's Day is
a time to celebrate all
things Irish," said Kevin
Sweeney, director of the
Irish American Climate
Project, which released
the report. "We celebrate
the fact that Ireland is
still green, still lovely
beyond compare. But we
also make it clear that
this beauty is fragile.
It can be lost if we fail
to act."
The report, "Changing
Shades of Green," was
released today in
Washington and Dublin by
the Irish American
Climate Project. It is
based on the latest work
of leading Irish climate
scientists, and was
issued in conjunction
with ICARUS, the Irish
Climate Analysis and
Research Units.
"Climate change has
the potential to change
the face of Ireland and
to transform its
environment," said John
Sweeney, one of the lead
scientists for the report
and former president of
the Irish Meteorological
Society. "Changes in
temperature, rainfall and
storm patterns can subtly
yet irrevocably alter the
Irish way of life."
The report takes a
unique approach, pairing
the scientific sections
with leading Irish
musicians, poets and
other artists who explain
how the projected
environmental
implications will affect
Irish culture. "Who else
but the Irish would
invoke music to explain
climate change?" Sweeney
asked.
"People want to know
that there are sacred
places that we will
protect," said Martin
Hayes, the famed Irish
fiddler. "They want to
know that we have a
barometer in our being
that stops us from doing
the irreversible."
"Everything in the
Irish landscape depends
on slow absorption, and
slow release," said Irish
filmmaker Dermot Somers,
in reference to projected
changes in rainfall
patterns. "When you get
very abrupt drenches,
these sudden downpours of
heavy rain and severe
wind, that process
doesn't work anymore."
The report is already
getting noticed on
Capitol Hill.
"As a
second-generation Irish
immigrant, with strong
ties to the country of my
ancestors, these
revelations are
troubling," said Rep.
Edward J. Markey
(D-Mass.), Chairman of
the House Select
Committee on Energy
Independence and Global
Warming. "And as the
Chairman of a new U.S.
House committee dedicated
to studying global
warming and its
solutions, it fits into a
larger pattern seen
across the globe, changes
these Irish eyes have
unfortunately witnessed
first-hand. Keeping the
Emerald Isle from turning
brown is one more reason
the world must act to
reduce the dangerous
buildup of global warming
pollution in our
atmosphere."
Ireland's green
landscapes would be
affected primarily by
increases in temperatures
and changes in rainfall
patterns. Prolonged
droughts, particularly in
the southeast, will lead
to brown hillsides as
grasses grow parched in
summer. Rainfall patterns
in the southeast of
Ireland will replicate
those associated with
Mediterranean climates.
Heavy rain events in the
winter, primarily in the
north and west, will lead
to erosion and the
exposure of granite and
gravel. Dublin, Ireland's
largest city, may face
water shortages as a
result of these changes.
"Despite the fact that
Ireland is renowned for
its steady rains, it is
deeply ironic that we may
face significant seasonal
water shortages as a
consequence of climate
change," said Dr. Rowan
Fealy, one of the
report's authors.
With the projected
warmer summers, the
surface of many bogs will
dry and crack. When a
warm summer is followed
by a wet autumn or
winter, rainwater seeps
into the cracks and works
its way to the bedrock --
causing massive stretches
of peat to rip loose and
slide down slope.
Warmer, damper
temperatures increase the
likelihood of potato
blight and could
eliminate the crop on a
commercial scale in
Ireland by mid-century.
Major adjustments in
farming practices,
necessitated by climate
change, will likely lead
to the introduction of
expanses of row crops --
changing the look and
feel of Irish farms and
the Irish landscape.
The report quotes from
William Butler Yeats'
classic poem, "Easter,
1916," with its famous
lines about an incident
that sparked the Irish
revolution: "All changed,
changed utterly."
"Those lines have real
meaning for the Irish,"
said Sweeney. "What Yeats
wrote then can also be
said of climate change.
All will have changed,
changed utterly, if we
fail to act. When the St.
Patrick's Day parties are
over, we want the Irish
to remember this. We want
them to know they have a
role to play. Those who
want to keep Ireland
green need to push for
changes in our energy
policies both in Ireland
and in America. They need
to push for changes to
stop the worst effects of
climate change from
coming to pass."
There are, adds
scientist and report
author Laura McElwain,
"still choices we can
make that may prevent
some of the worst
effects."
Download copies of the
report.
Source: Irish American
Climate Project |