The sun sets behind the Kukulkan
Pyramid in the ancient Mayan city of Chichen Itza in Mexico on
Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. A study published online Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013
by the journal Science says as the world gets warmer, people are more
prone to get hot under the collar. Scientists found that aggressive acts
like violent crimes and wars become more likely with each added degree.
Solomon Hsiang, author of the study, pointed to the collapse of the
Mayan civilization that coincided with periods of historic drought about
1200 years ago. (AP Photo/Israel Leal)
WASHINGTON (AP) —
As the world gets warmer, people are more likely to get hot under the
collar, scientists say. A massive new study finds that aggressive acts
like committing violent crimes and waging war become more likely with
each added degree.
Researchers analyzed 60 studies on historic empire collapses, recent wars, violent crime rates in the United States,
lab simulations that tested police decisions on when to shoot and even
cases where pitchers threw deliberately at batters in baseball. They
found a common thread over centuries:
Extreme weather — very hot or dry — means more violence.
"When the weather gets bad we tend to be more willing to hurt other people," said economist Solomon Hsiang of the University of California, Berkeley.
The team of economists even came
up with a formula that predicts how much the risk of different types of
violence should increase with extreme weather. In war-torn parts of
equatorial Africa, it says, every added degree Fahrenheit
or so increases the chance of conflict between groups— rebellion, war,
civil unrest — by 11 percent to 14 percent. For the United States, the
formula says that for every increase of 5.4 degrees Fahrenheit, the
likelihood of violent crime goes up 2 percent to 4 percent.
The same paper sees global
averages increasing by about 3.6 degrees in the next half-century. So
that implies essentially about 40 percent to 50 percent more chance for
African wars than it would be without global warming, said Edward Miguel, another Berkeley economist and study co-author.
When the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
updates its report next year on the impacts of global warming, it will
address the issue of impacts on war for the first time, said Carnegie Institution scientist Chris Field, who heads that worldwide study group. The new study is likely to play a big role, he said.
Hsiang
said that whenever the analyzed studies looked at temperature and
conflict, the link was clear, no matter where or when. His analysis
examines about a dozen studies on collapses of empires or dynasties,
about 15 studies on crime and aggression and more than 30 studies on
wars, civil strife or intergroup conflicts.
In one study, police officers in a
psychology experiment were more likely to choose to shoot someone in a
lab simulation when the room temperature was hotter, Hsiang said. In
another study, baseball pitchers were more likely to retaliate against
their opponents when a teammate was hit by a pitch on hotter days.
Hsiang pointed to the collapse of the Mayan civilization that coincided with periods of historic drought about 1,200 years ago.
People often don't consider human conflict when they think about climate change, which is "an important oversight," said Ohio State University psychology professor Brad Bushman, who wasn't part of the study but whose work on crime and heat was analyzed by Hsiang.
Experts who research war and peace were split in their reaction to the work.
"The world will be a very violent place by mid-century if climate change continues as projected," said Thomas Homer-Dixon, a professor of diplomacy at the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Ontario.
But Joshua Goldstein, a professor of international relations at American University
and author of "Winning the War on War," found faults with the way the
study measured conflicts. He said the idea of hotter tempers with hotter
temperatures is only one factor in conflict, and that it runs counter to a long and large trend to less violence.
"Because of positive changes in technology, economics, politics and health" conflict is likely to continue to drop, although maybe not as much as it would without climate change, he said.
Miguel acknowledges that many
other factors play a role in conflict and said it's too soon to see
whether conflict from warming will outweigh peace from prosperity: "It's
a race against time."
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