Atomic scientists keep 'Doomsday Clock' as close to midnight as ever
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[January 24, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Atomic scientists on Tuesday kept their "Doomsday
Clock" set as close to midnight as ever before, citing Russia's actions
on nuclear weapons amid its invasion of Ukraine, nuclear-armed Israel's
Gaza war and worsening climate change as factors driving the risk of
global catastrophe.
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, as they did last year, set the
clock at 90 seconds to midnight - the theoretical point of annihilation.
Scientists set the clock based on "existential" risks to Earth and its
people: nuclear threats, climate change and disruptive technologies such
as artificial intelligence and new biotechnology.
"Conflict hot spots around the world carry the threat of nuclear
escalation, climate change is already causing death and destruction, and
disruptive technologies like AI and biological research advance faster
than their safeguards," Rachel Bronson, the Bulletin's president and
CEO, told Reuters, adding that keeping the clock unchanged from the
prior year is "not an indication that the world is stable."
The Chicago-based nonprofit created the clock in 1947 during the Cold
War tensions that followed World War Two to warn the public about how
close humankind was to destroying the world. It said on Tuesday that
ominous trends continue to point toward catastrophe, including the fact
that China, Russia and the United States all are spending large amounts
of money to expand or modernize their nuclear arsenals, boosting the
risk of nuclear war through mistake or miscalculation.
Russia's large-scale invasion of Ukraine, set to reach its second
anniversary next month, has escalated tensions with the West to their
most dangerous levels since the Cold War.
"A durable end to Russia's war in Ukraine seems distant, and the use of
nuclear weapons by Russia in that conflict remains a serious
possibility. In the past year Russia has sent numerous worrying nuclear
signals," Bronson said.
Bronson cited Russian President Vladimir Putin's February 2023 decision
to suspend Russian participation in the New START treaty with the United
States that limited the strategic nuclear arsenals of the two countries.
The United States and Russia together hold nearly 90% of the world's
nuclear warheads, enough to destroy the planet many times over.
Bronson additionally cited Putin's March 2023 announcement of Russia's
deployment of tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus and the Russian
parliament's October 2023 passage of a law withdrawing ratification of
the global treaty banning nuclear weapons tests. Russian analyst Sergei
Karaganov last year also spoke of the need to threaten nuclear strikes
in Europe in order to intimidate and "sober up" Moscow's enemies.
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A Russian Yars intercontinental ballistic missile system drives
during a military parade on Victory Day, which marks the 78th
anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two, in
Red Square in central Moscow, Russia May 9, 2023. Pelagiya Tikhonova/Moscow
News Agency/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
Traditional nuclear arms control has come to an end for now even as
a three-way nuclear arms race is shaping up among China, Russia and
the United States, said Alexander Glaser of Princeton University, a
member of the Bulletin's board of experts on nuclear technology and
climate science.
"The picture is quite bleak on the nuclear side this year," Glaser
added.
Israel has been at war with Hamas since the Palestinian Islamist
group, based in Gaza, launched attacks in southern Israel in October
2023.
"As a nuclear state, Israel's actions are clearly relevant to the
Doomsday Clock discussion. Of particular worry is that the conflict
might escalate more broadly in the region creating a larger
conventional war and drawing in more nuclear powers or near-nuclear
powers," Bronson said.
Climate change was added as a factor in setting the clock in 2007.
"The world in 2023 entered into uncharted territory as it suffered
its hottest year on record and global greenhouse gas emissions
continued to rise," Bronson said. "Both global and North Atlantic
sea-surface temperatures broke records, and Antarctic sea ice
reached its lowest daily extent since the advent of satellite data."
Bronson said that while 2023 was a record-breaking year for clean
energy with $1.7 trillion in new investments, fossil fuel
investments totaled nearly $1 trillion. Bronson called current
efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions "grossly insufficient to
avoid dangerous human and economic impacts from climate change,
which disproportionately affect the poorest people in the world."
The Bulletin was founded in 1945 by scientists including Albert
Einstein and J. Robert Oppenheimer.
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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