Doomsday Clock"
Moves Two Minutes Closer To Midnight
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Adjusts Clock From 7 to 5
Minutes Before Midnight; “ Deteriorating” Global Situation
Cited on Nuclear Weapons and New Factor: Climate Change.
By Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
01/17/07 "BAS"
-- - WASHINGTON, D.C. and LONDON, ENGLAND /// January
17, 2007 /// The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (BAS) is
moving the minute hand of the Doomsday Clock two minutes
closer to midnight. It is now 5 minutes to midnight.
Reflecting global failures to solve the problems posed by
nuclear weapons and the climate crisis, the decision by the
BAS Board of Directors was made in consultation with the
Bulletin’s Board of Sponsors, which includes 18 Nobel
Laureates.
BAS announced the Clock change today at an unprecedented
joint news conference held at the American Association for
the Advancement of Science in Washington, DC, and the Royal
Society in London. In a statement supporting the decision to
move the hand of the Doomsday Clock, the BAS Board focused
on two major sources of catastrophe: the perils of 27,000
nuclear weapons, 2000 of them ready to launch within
minutes; and the destruction of human habitats from climate
change. In articles by 14 leading scientists and security
experts writing in the January-February issue of theBulletin
of the Atomic Scientists (http://www.thebulletin.org), the
potential for catastrophic damage from human-made
technologies is explored further.
Created in 1947 by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
the Doomsday Clock has been adjusted only 17 times prior to
today, most recently in February 2002 after the events of
9/11.
By moving the hand of the Clock closer to midnight — the
figurative end of civilization — the BAS Board of Directors
is drawing attention to the increasing dangers from the
spread of nuclear weapons in a world of violent conflict,
and to the catastrophic harm from climate change that is
unfolding. The BAS statement explains: "We stand at the
brink of a Second Nuclear Age. Not since the first atomic
bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki has the world
faced such perilous choices. North Korea’s recent test of a
nuclear weapon, Iran’s nuclear ambitions, a renewed emphasis
on the military utility of nuclear weapons, the failure to
adequately secure nuclear materials, and the continued
presence of some 26,000 nuclear weapons in the United States
and Russia are symptomatic of a failure to solve the
problems posed by the most destructive technology on Earth."
The BAS statement continues: "The dangers posed by climate
change are nearly as dire as those posed by nuclear weapons.
The effects may be less dramatic in the short term than the
destruction that could be wrought by nuclear explosions, but
over the next three to four decades climate change could
cause irremediable harm to the habitats upon which human
societies depend for survival."
Stephen Hawking, a BAS sponsor, professor of mathematics at
the University of Cambridge, and a fellow of The Royal
Society, said: "As scientists, we understand the dangers of
nuclear weapons and their devastating effects, and we are
learning how human activities and technologies are affecting
climate systems in ways that may forever change life on
Earth. As citizens of the world, we have a duty to alert the
public to the unnecessary risks that we live with every day,
and to the perils we foresee if governments and societies do
not take action now to render nuclear weapons obsolete and
to prevent further climate change."
Kennette Benedict, executive director, Bulletin of the
Atomic Scientists, said: "As we stand at the brink of a
Second Nuclear Age and at the onset of unprecedented climate
change, our way of thinking about the uses and control of
technologies must change to prevent unspeakable destruction
and future human suffering."
Sir Martin Rees, president of The Royal Society, professor
of cosmology and astrophysics , master of Trinity College at
the University of Cambridge, and a BAS sponsor, said:
"Nuclear weapons still pose the most catastrophic and
immediate threat to humanity, but climate change and
emerging technologies in the life sciences also have the
potential to end civilization as we know it."
Lawrence M. Krauss, professor of physics and astronomy at
Case Western Reserve University, an a BAS sponsor, said: "In
these dangerous times, scientists have a responsibility to
speak truth to power especially if it might provoke actions
to reduce threats from the preventable technological dangers
currently facing humanity. To do anything else would be
negligent."
Ambassador Thomas Pickering, a BAS director and co-chair of
the International Crisis Group, said: "Although our current
situation is dire, we have the means today to successfully
address these global problems. For example, through vigorous
diplomacy and international agencies like the International
Atomic Energy Agency, we can negotiate and implement
agreements that could protect us all from the most
destructive technology on Earth—nuclear weapons."
Highlights of the new statement from the Bulletin of Atomic
Scientists include the following:
"The second nuclear era, unlike the dawn of the first
nuclear age in 1945, is characterized by a world of porous
national borders, rapid communications that facilitate the
spread of technical knowledge, and expanded commerce in
potentially dangerous dual-use technologies and materials.
The Pakistan-based network that provided nuclear
technologies to Libya, North Korea, and Iran, is an example
of the new challenges confronting the international
community."
"Sixteen years after the end of the Cold War, following
substantial reductions in nuclear weapons by the United
States and Russia, the two major powers have now stalled in
their progress toward deeper reductions in their arsenals."
"More than 1400 metric tons of highly enriched uranium and
approximately 500 tons of plutonium are distributed
worldwide at some 140 sites, in unguarded civilian power
plants and university research reactors, as well as in
military facilities."
"Global warming poses a dire threat to human civilization
that is second only to nuclear weapons. Through flooding and
desertification, climate change threatens the habitats and
agricultural resources that societies depend upon for
survival. As such, climate change is also likely to
contribute to mass migrations and even to wars over arable
land, water, and other natural resources."
"The prospect of civilian nuclear power development in
countries around the world raises further concerns about the
availability of nuclear materials. Growth in nuclear power
is anticipated to be especially high in Asia, where Japan is
planning to bring on line five new plants by 2010, and China
intends to build 30 nuclear reactors by 2020."
"Several factors are driving the turn to nuclear power—
aging nuclear reactors, rising energy demands, a desire to
diversify energy portfolios and reduce reliance on fossil
fuels, and the need to reduce carbon emissions that cause
climate change. Yet expansion of nuclear power increases the
risks of nuclear proliferation."
The BAS statement also outlines a number of steps that, if
taken immediately, could help to prevent disaster, including
the following:
Reduce the launch readiness of U.S. and Russian nuclear
forces and completely remove nuclear weapons from the
day-to-day operations of their militaries.
Reduce the number of nuclear weapons by dismantling,
storing, and destroying more than 20,000 warheads over the
next 10 years, as well as greatly increasing efforts to
locate, store, and secure nuclear materials in Russia and
elsewhere.
Stop production of nuclear weapons material, including
highly enriched uranium and plutonium—w hether in military
or civilian facilities.
Engage in serious and candid discussion about the potential
expansion of nuclear power worldwide. While nuclear energy
production does not produce carbon dioxide, it does raise
other significant concerns, such as the health and
environmental hazards of nuclear waste, the production of
nuclear materials that can be diverted to the production of
weapons, and the safety and security of the plants
themselves.
ABOUT BAS AND THE
CLOCK
The Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists was founded in 1945 by University of Chicago
scientists who had worked on the Manhattan Project and were
deeply concerned about the use of nuclear weapons and
nuclear war. In 1947 the Bulletin introduced its clock to
convey the perils posed by nuclear weapons through a simple
design. The Doomsday Clock evoked both the imagery of
apocalypse (midnight) and the contemporary idiom of nuclear
explosion (countdown to zero). In 1949 Bulletin leaders
realized that movement of the minute hand would signal the
organization’s assessment of world events. The decision to
move the minute hand is made by the Bulletin’s Board of
Directors in consultation with its Board of Sponsors, which
includes 18 Nobel Laureates. The Bulletin’s Doomsday Clock
has become a universally recognized indicator of the world’s
vulnerability to nuclear weapons and other threats.
Additional information is available on the Web at
/www.thebulletin.org
© 2007 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists