A gigantic mushroom cloud billowed over Nagasaki, Japan, when an atomic bomb was dropped on the city in 1945.
Credit: U.S. National Archives
The world is "3 minutes" from doomsday.
That's the grim outlook from board members of The Bulletin of the
Atomic Scientists. Frustrated with a lack of international action to
address climate change
and shrink nuclear arsenals, they decided today (Jan. 22) to push the
minute hand of their iconic "Doomsday Clock" to 11:57 p.m.
It's the first time the clock hands have moved in three years; since
2012, the clock had been fixed at 5 minutes to symbolic doom, midnight. [End of the World? Top Doomsday Fears]
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists doesn't use the clock to make any real doomsday
predictions. Rather, the clock is a visual metaphor to warn the public
about how close the world is to a potentially civilization-ending
catastrophe. Each year, the magazine's board analyzes threats to
humanity's survival to decide where the Doomsday Clock's hands should be
set.
Experts on the board said they felt a sense of urgency this year
because of the world's ongoing addiction to fossil fuels,
procrastination with enacting laws to cut greenhouse gas emissions and
slow efforts to get rid of nuclear weapons.
"We are not saying it is too late to take action but the window for
action is closing rapidly," Kennette Benedict, executive director of The
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, said in a news conference this
morning in Washington, D.C. "We move the clock hand today to inspire
action."
For instance, if nothing is done to reduce the amount of heat-trapping
gasses, such as carbon dioxide, in the atmosphere, Earth could be 5 to
15 degrees Fahrenheit (3 to 8 degrees Celsius) warmer by the end of
century, said Sivan Kartha, a senior scientist at the Stockholm
Environment Institute.
Some people might not feel alarmed when they see those numbers; they
might normally experience that kind of temperature swing in the course
of a single day, Kartha said. But, he said a temperature increase of
that magnitude was enough to bring the world out of the last ice age, and it will be enough to "radically transform" the Earth's surface in the future.
Sharon Squassoni, another board member and director of the
Proliferation Prevention Program at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, said nuclear disarmament efforts have "ground to a
halt" and many nations are expanding, not scaling back, their nuclear
capabilities. Russia is upgrading its nuclear program, India plans to
expand its nuclear submarine fleet, and Pakistan has reportedly started
operating a third plutonium reactor, Squassoni said.
She said the United States has good rhetoric on nuclear
nonproliferation, but at the same time is in the midst of a $335 billion
overhaul of its nuclear program. (That figure seems to come from a Congressional Budget Office report from December 2013.)
"The risk from nuclear weapons is not that someone is going to press
the button, but the existence of these weapons costs a lot of time,
effort and money to keep them secure," Squassoni said, adding that there
have been troubling safety discrepancies reported in recent years at
power plants.
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists was founded in 1945 by scientists who created the atomic bomb as part of the Manhattan Project
and wanted to raise awareness about the dangers of nuclear technology.
The Doomsday Clock first appeared on a cover of the magazine in 1947,
with its hands set at 11:53 p.m.
The clock's hands shifted quite a bit over the following seven decades.
They were closest to midnight in 1953, set at 11:58 p.m., after both
the United States and the Soviet Union conducted their first tests of
the hydrogen bomb. The clock's hands were pushed all the way back to
11:43 p.m., 17 minutes to midnight, in December 1991, after the world's
superpowers signed the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, which at the
time, seemed like a promising move toward nuclear disarmament.
Follow Megan Gannon on Twitter. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.
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