And if youve never heard of them, youre in for a big surprise, because the reserves are so vast that theyll help solve Americas Energy needs for the next century. [ticking] if you were waiting for the day Global Warming would change the world, that day is here. Its happening far from civilizations notice in a place about as remote as you can get. Welcome to 60 minutes on cnbc. Im steve kroft. We live on an increasingly endangered planet, from the glaciers of antarctica to the rich prairie lands of canada. And the ultimate disaster may be financial as well as environmental. Later in this episode, scott pelley reports from antarctica on the wideranging effects of Global Warming. And later bob simon has a story from canada on the environmental damage caused by the next great oil rush. But our first story involves a controversial waste product that could have damaging effects on the environment. There are more than 600 coalfired power plants generating electricity in the u. S. , and those plants produce 130 million tons of waste called coal ash. It contains concentrations of mercury, arsenic, lead, and other toxic materials. And as lesley stahl first reported in 2009, when coal ash is dumped into wet pondsand there are more than 500 of those across the country the result can have an enormous health risk on the People Living in nearby communities. We get about 48 , nearly half of the electricity in this country from coal. Jim roewer is one of the top lobbyists for the power industry. Coal is going to be around for a long time. And we really cant get rid of coal. We shouldnt get rid of coal. Well, should or shouldnt, we cant, and coal makes waste. Would you say that the industry has done a good job of disposing of the coal ash waste . We can do better. Does that mean no . Well, we had a kingston spill. Thats kingston, tennessee, where, in december 2008, a giant retention pool of coal ash buckled under the weight of five decades of waste. All the power lines have been knocked out. A billion gallons of muck shot into the emory river like a black tsunami. One person in the house, and hes alive. Engulfing homes, uprooting trees. Everythings gone. And throwing fish out of the water. No, dont eat the fish, please. Residents woke up to an apocalyptic moonscape of ash bergs everywhere. This stuff is just sitting there, steaming. The spill was a hundred times larger than the exxon valdez, and it was all coal ash. Youd never heard of coal ash before kingston. Never. Never. Never. Wasnt a problem. Well, it was a problem; we just didnt know. The problem is, where do you put all that stuff . Here, the Tennessee Valley authority, tva, dumped up to 1,000 tons of coal ash every day into a wet pond near the plant, slowly amassing a waste cake 60 feet high. Some of the ingredients, according to the e. P. A. arsenic, lead, mercury, selenium, cadmium, and other toxic metals. You know, some people say that this is a poisoned meadow. I guess thats, you know, one way to describe it. It just doesnt belong here. It needs to come out. Leo francendese is an environmental mr. Fixit. He was sent by the e. P. A. To clean up this mess. And in the wrong circumstances, coal ash is dangerous. Breathing it, thats dangerous. The summer heat can bake the ash into a fine, talclike powder that can wreak havoc on your lungs. And this is all coal ash right along here. So while the government has never formally labeled coal ash a Hazardous Waste, its being treated as such here. Is that all coal ash . Yeah. As we left the site, we were scrubbed clean, as was our car. Oh, my goodness. Look at this. Is itevery car that goes through the site goes through this . Comes through this. Gary topmiller lives right on the river. He had a frontrow seat when the spill covered his dock. Now, what the doctors did tell me was, get out of there. And i said, i dont have anyplace to go. So how do you live . You dont go out on the water. No, we dont go out of the house. From the house, he sees scientists collecting samples to analyze just how bad the water is. The river looks clear, but topmiller says thats deceptive. Okay, this comes out of right here. Right, it came right off the top. And i should shake it . Turn it upside down, and start shaking it. And this is what the river looks like once that stuff gets suspended in it. And how theyre going to get that all out of the river, i dont have an idea. Most of his neighbors have packed up and left. Go down the river, and you pass home after home that are deserted, the hubbub of children replaced by the hum of heavy machinery. Those left behind say the noise is one thing. What really infuriates them is executives from the power plant telling them that coal ash is as safe as dirt. We have broken the trust. Anda ray oversees environmental policy at the Tennessee Valley authority, which is responsible for the spill. I asked her how toxic she thinks coal ash is. Id say that the constituents, the things that are in the coal ash, are the same things that are naturally occurring in soil and rock. So is it like dirt . Would you say that . Would you say that sentence, that stuff is like dirt . Ashthatthat ash material is higher than dirt in two areas, and that is arsenic and thallium. I then asked about Company Reports that repeatedly questioned the stability of the ash pots. Should the tva have seen this coming . You know you were warned repeatedly. Lesley, there were red flags that have been noticed all through the years, and we recognize that those red flags should have been addressed. But yes, we missed them, and we dont ever want to miss them again. The spilled ash is now being loaded onto trains and sent off to a dry landfill in alabama. Right now, coal ash disposal is regulated by the states, some of which have strict rules, some hardly any at all. E. P. A. Can be a force for good. Lisa jackson heads the e. P. A. Shes been reviewing whether the federal government should get involved by labeling coal ash a Hazardous Waste, which would mean much tighter regulations and oversight. Why wouldnt you, right now, this minute, on 60 minutes, declare that coal ash is a Hazardous Waste . E. P. A. , in making a regulatory determination, has to look at a number of factors, including the toxicity of the material and how its currently managed. But thats done according to law. The industry opposes calling coal ash Hazardous Waste. Theyre pushing for another solution recycling. [ticking] as well see when 60 minutes on cnbc returns, the coal industry thinks its found a solution by recycling coal ash. But in some cases, its only made the problem worse. We asked people, if you could get paid to do something you really love, what would you do . [ woman ] id be a writer. [ man ] id be a baker. [ woman ] i wanna be a pie maker. [ man ] i wanna be a pilot. [ woman ] id be an architect. What if i told you someone could pay you and what if that person were you . When you think about it, isnt that what retirement should be, paying ourselves to do what we love . Paying ourselves maestro of project management. Baron of the buildout. You need a permit. To be this awesome. And you. Rent from national. Because only national lets you choose any car in the aisle. And go. You can even take a fullsize or above, and still pay the midsize price. aaron purrrfect. vo meeeow, business pro. Meeeow. Go national. Go like a pro. As lesley stahl reported in 2009, the coal industry has been looking for ways to dispose of hundreds of millions of pounds of toxic coal ash, the waste product produced from coalfired power plants across the u. S. That hill over there might be 40 feet of coal ash. Ted yoakam, a lawyer in virginia, says recycling can breed its own disaster. He says that in 2002, the states power company, dominion, got rid of some of its excess coal ash by giving it to this golf course in chesapeake. Wow. How many tons of coal ash, do you know, did they use to build this golf course . We know that they put at least 1. 5 million tons. Million tons. Yes. A conditionaluse permit to construct and operate a golf course. In this city council meeting, a consultant hired by the company that built the golf course assured the mayor that coal ash was safe for reuse. It, in every aspect, is its the same as dirt, as its been explained to me. Im not aware of any negative aspects of it at all. The mayor then turned to a dominion executive. Is there any Environmental Concerns we should be aware of . No, sir. We at dominion power are fully in compliance with all the federal and state regulations. Two years later, this internal Company Study about handling the ash for the golf course recommended that workers use impervious gloves and particulatefiltering respirators due to potential health risks. Robyn pierce and her neighbor Stacy Moorman live across the street from the golf course. It was said that they were told they should wear respirators and body suits. Nobody came up and down either one of these two streets and handed out wardrobe for us. Our children were out there, playing in the yard, breathing the stuff. How does that happen . Lso, dominl Risk Assessment warned of the dangers of coal ash leaching into the water supply. To prevent that, the contractor who built the golf course was supposed to build a twofoot barrier under the coal ash and one 18 inches on top. The contractors engineers certified this was done, but attorney yoakam, who represents townspeople who are suing dominion, suspects it wasnt. You can see right here its right at the surface. Oh, my god. Thats coal ash . Of course it is. Insects have pulled it up. You can see how it flies away. The city dug into the golf course in 2008, did a test, and found elevated levels of toxic metals in the water. With all the knowledge that dominion had about the coal ash and the lead and the arsenic and beryllium and all the poison, to put it in this environment is just an outrage. That water test was just for the golf course. Dominion told us and the e. P. A. Confirms that e. P. A. Testing shows no harm to residential wells nearby. I invite anybody from the companies who have put it over there to come to my house and have dinner, and i will use that tap water. Stacy and her neighbors think its too risky to drink the water, so after dominion refused to provide them with bottled water, they began trudging to a local church where the city pipes in guaranteed clean water. Is that how you get your Drinking Water . Yeah. We use it to brush our teeth and take baths. Dominion declined to give us an interview, but most Power Companies rely on recycling because it cuts the 130 million tons of coal waste every year in half. The industry calls recycling beneficial use. Ugh dont evenbeneficial for who . The only people it was beneficial for were for those Utility Companies that had to get that stuff off their hands because they were already in violation with stockpiling too much. That is what beneficial use meant. But the e. P. A. And the Bush Administration endorsed beneficial use, and now coal ash is recycled in dozens of ways as cement substitute, for instance. Its also placed under roads and in deserted mines, and its added to products from carpets to bowling balls to bathroom sinks. While the industry says the uses have been studied, i asked lisa jackson whether the e. P. A. Knows if some of the recycled products are safe. School room carpeting. I dont know. I have no data that says thats safe at this point. Kitchen counters. The same. 50,000 tons of coal ash byproducts have been used in agriculture. Now, whats being done, through e. P. A. , to look at the use of coal ash in Agricultural Products . Anything . Are youis there a study . Is there im not sure that theres any study out there right now. How did we get to a place where coal ash is in products without anybody knowing . Were here now because coal ash, at this time, isnt a regulated material by the federal government. If the e. P. A. Declares coal ash a Hazardous Waste, lobbyist jim roewer says beneficial use would die and the cost of disposal would skyrocket. We look at that, and were looking at something on the order of 12 to 13 billion. Billion. Billion. And whod pay for that . We know. The customers. Environmental protection doesnt come cheap. He says the current statebystate regulatory system may not be perfect, but it works. Could you say right now that the disposal in all the coal ash plants today are safe and that theyre all doing a proper job . All i can guarantee is that theyre going to do their best to manage coal ash safely so that you dont have a release like kingston. Are all these plants safe . Thats what the state regulations are all about to ensure the Safe Management of coal ash. Butbut whatyoure not saying they are safe. Youre playing word games with me. Youre not saying, they are safe. You want me to guarantee that. Yeah, i do. Theyre absolutely safe . I wantyes, i do. What i can say is, the state regulations and the Utility Management practices are put in place to ensurewith a goal of Safe Management of coal ash. I dont think many people really trust the utility industry, im sorry to tell you. Youre not the first one to tell me that. In may of 2010, the Environmental Protection agency agreed to regulate coal ash for the first time, but they have yet to figure out exactly what those regulations are going to be. Our next story involves the next big oil boom, and its not in the middle east. Its happening with our neighbors to the north, in canada, near a frigid Frontier Town called Fort Mcmurray. And as bob simon reported in 2006, the oilmen there arent digging holes and waiting for gushers. Rather, theyre digging up dirt which is saturated with oil. Theres so much of it, the oil sands of Fort Mcmurray could become more important to the United States than all of the oil that currently flows to the u. S. From saudi arabia. 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, vehicles which look like prehistoric beasts move across an arctic wasteland, extracting the oil sands. Theres so much to scoop, so much money to be made. There are 175 billion barrels of Proven Oil Reserves here. Thats second to saudi arabias 260 billion, but its only what companies can get with todays technology. The estimate of how many more barrels of oil are buried deeper underground is staggering. Listen to shell canada chief clive mather. We know there is much, much more there. The total estimates could be 2 trillion or even higher. 2 trillion . 2 trillion. Thats the number with a t. Thats the number with a t. This is a very, very big resource. Very big . Thats eight times the amount of reserves in saudi arabia. The oil sands are buried under forests in alberta the size of florida. The oil here doesnt come gushing out of the sand the way it does in the middle east. The oil is in the sand. It has to be dug up and processed. This mine in general will be in operation for about 25 years. Rick george, the coloradoborn c. E. O. Of Suncor Energy, took us into his strip mine for a tour. So, bob, this is what the oil sands tar looks like. Its a very rich, very pliable kind of a soil. Now, when i squeeze it, why doesnt oil come out . Well, because its not warm enough. If you add this to hot water, youll start the separation process, and youll see the oil come to the top of the water, and youll see sand drop to the bottom. It looks like topsoil, doesnt it . It does, but it is oil. It looks like topsoil, but all it grows is money. [laughter] it didnt always. The oil sands have been in the ground for millions of years, but for decades, prospectors lost millions of dollars trying to squeeze the oil out of the sand. It simply cost too much. T. Boone pickens, the legendary texas oil tycoon, was working albertas Traditional Oil rigs back in the 60s and remembers how he and his colleagues thought mining for oil sands was a joke. Here we are, sitting here having a drink after work, and somebody said, this isnt going toit isnt possible. Itll have to be subsidized to a level. Said, before theyd make money, youd have to have 5 oil. [laughter] we never thought thatd happen. But then 40 a barrel happened, and the oil sands not only made sense; they made billions to the people digging them. But it wasnt just the price of oil that changed the landscape. It was the toys. Thats what they call the giant trucks and shovels that roam the mines. Everything about the oil industry has always been big. Its characterized by bigness, from the pumps to the personalities. But up here in alberta, its frankly ridiculous. Just look at this truck. It is the biggest truck in the world. Its three stories high and costs 5 million. It carries a load of 400 tons of oil sands, which means that at todays prices, each load is worth 10,000. The oil sands go into a plant. Theyre heated in a cell which separates the oil from the sand. The result looks like something out of willy wonkas chocolate factory. This oil froth is sent to an upgrader and eventually to a refinery. And once youve done that, its as good as the oil that comes jumping out of the sands in saudi arabia . Absolutely as good as. In fact, it even trades at a premium, because its a highquality crude oil. [hoedown music] the capital of the oil sands frenzy is a Frontier Town called Fort Mcmurray, which isnt in the middle of nowhere. Its north of nowhere and colder than the klondike but a boomtown just the same. The local hockey team is called the oil barons. Theyre on a winning streak. [crowd cheering] brian jean represents the region in canadas parliament. Is this comparable to a gold rush . I think its bigger than a gold rush. Were expecting 100 billion, over the next ten years, to be invested in this area, 100 billion in a population that currently is 70,000 people. We got in a little earlier. T. Boone pickens, who once scoffed at the oil sands, is one of those investors. Pickens runs a hedge fund in dallas and is now a true believer. Were managing 5 billion here, and about 10 of its in the oil sands. So its the one single largest investment we have. 10 of 5 billion. I flunked math. 500 million. And if oil sands are the answer for investors, are oil sands the answer for the United States . Oh, i think so. [ticking] but despite the boomtown mentality in the great white north, well meet environmentalists who say there may be a high price to pay to get all that oil out of the dirt when 60 minutes on cnbc returns. Wow. Look at you. Ive always tried to give it my best shot. These days im living with a higher risk of stroke due to afib, a type of irregular heartbeat, not caused by a heart valve problem. At first, i took warfarin, but i wondered, could i up my game . My doctor told me about eliquis. And three Important Reasons to take eliquis instead. One, in a clinical trial, eliquis was proven to reduce the risk of stroke better than warfarin. Two, eliquis had less major bleeding than warfarin. And three. Unlike warfarin, theres no routine blood testing. [ male announcer ] dont stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. Eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. Dont take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. While taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. Seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. Eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. Tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. Ive got three Important Reasons to up my game with eliquis. [ male announcer ] ask your doctor today if eliquis is right for you. no ask your doctor today customer erin swenson ordebut they didnt fit. Line customers not happy, im not happy. Sales go down, im not happy. Merch comes back, im not happy. Use ups. They make returns easy. Unhappy customer becomes happy customer. Then, repeat customer. Easy returns, im happy. Repeat customers, im happy. Sales go up, im happy. I ordered another pair. Im happy. both im happy. Im happy. Happy. Happy. Happy. Happy. Happy happy. I love logistics. The massive oil sands of Fort Mcmurray may be the next big oil boom. And as bob simon reported in 2006, it may also give canada a lot more leverage in its dealings with the United States. Most of those lumbering trucks are on their way to the gas tanks of america. A Million Barrels a day are now coming out of the oil sands, and Oil Production is expected to triple within a decade. It wouldnt replace middle eastern oil, but at that point, it will be the single largest source of foreign oil for the United States, even bigger than saudi arabia, which sends a million and a half barrels a day to america. When i go to washington now, they are just starting to pay attention, surprisingly. Just starting . In the last couple of years. Greg stringham works for the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers and often lobbies for the oil sands in washington. He points out that in alberta, you dont have to look for the oil sands. The earth moves. When it comes to exploration in the oil sands, you cant drill a dry hole. Its there. We know where it is. Theyve outlined it. You dont have any risk. But other conventional sectors around the world, theres a huge exploration risk. The exploration risks are the least of it. Much of the worlds crude is in the middle east, where the instability is deeper than the oil. [hoedown music] when albertas blueeyed sheiks took to wall street last summer in their stetsons to drum up support for the oil sands, their message seemed to be, if you cant trust alberta, who can you trust . Alberta is a very good place to do business. Its a very stable environment. I mean, youre understating it, arent you . I mean, alberta is as safe as you can get on this planet, isnt it . Its a great place to do business. And they havent had a civil war for a while. We havent had a civil war for a long time. The bonus for canadians, aside from the treasure, is the notion that americans might have to start treating them with a little less condescension. With their oil, i think were going to need them a lot more than they need us. We may appear, in canada, to be a mouse compared to the elephant down south in terms of diplomacy or politics. But in terms of resources, we are mighty equals. There have been grumblings out of ottawa in the past that canada should consider using the oil sands as leverage in its serious trade disputes with the United States. Do you think americas taking canada for granted on the oil sands . Absolutely, and i think most peoplemost canadians believe that. And the canadians have alternatives. The chinese, for example, are just dying to get a piece of the sandbox. Ive been contacted personally by chinese delegates that want to get into the plant sites here and want to see and want to invest. What do you think about the chinese interest in the oil sands up in alberta . I first thought they were tire kickers, but i think theyre serious buyers. [horn honks] and the millions of chinese whove moved from their bicycles to traffic jams are driving up the demand for oil. Its virtually insatiable, and the canadians want to step up production quickly. Whats holding them back is labor, the shortage of it. We need another 100,000 people here in Fort Mcmurray. Thats why one oil company has built a runway to fly workers daily from civilization to Fort Mcmurray. But why would anyone want to come work in a place where temperatures plummet to 40 below and the sun sets shortly after it rises in the long winter . Well, perhaps because the Oil Companies pay some of the highest salaries in north america. Take josh lichti. It could be up to about, around here, maybe 120,000. So its pretty good. So youre going to be making 120 grand by the time youre 22. Yeah, yeah. Its amazing. But even if workers come flocking, the Oil Companies still have other problems. Creating energy from oil sands requires so much energy that the Oil Companies wind up spiking Greenhouse Gas emissions. And they do it in volumes that exceed any other production of oil crude anywhere on the planet. Elizabeth may is the director of the sierra club of canada. She takes issue not only with what the oil sands are doing to the atmosphere but to the land. The Oil Companies, environmentalists say, are digging up an entire province. Take a helicopter ride over the mines, and youll think youre flying over the moon after a moonquake. One of the reasons they can be mined the way theyre mined is the out of sight, out of mind aspect of it. I mean, your film crew is one of the few thats gone in there to look at how devastating this is. Even the money men have noticed. Cant argue with it. I mean, theres no question that theyve got a mess up there. I do believe that will be taken care of over time. The Oil Companies say theyll reduce Greenhouse Gases, and they point out theyre required by canadian law to refill old mines and plant new trees, and that is happening slowly. One company, syncrude, has even introduced bison to land that was oncea barren p. Rick george of Suncor Energy insists, in the future, people wont recognizee mines. So today is a mine. What youll see ten years from now it is a replanted forest. Youre telling me that if i come here, its going to be pretty . Absolutely. These sites will all be gone backnow, well be mining at a different location at that point, but sure, but thisll look thisll look forested when were done with it in 20 years time. But theres a larger question that not only environmentalists are asking. Will the availability of an enormous supply of secure oil right next door mean america will have little incentive to reduce its dependence on oil . What canadas doing is continuing to feed the u. S. Addition to fossil fuels. Instead of being the kind of friend who says, lets make a helpful intervention here, were acting as the supplier of a drug fix to the u. S. While all the time saying, just say no. But we keep selling it. But unless the chinese go back to bicycles and americans trash their suvs, there will be buyers for oil anywhere, no matter how its found or mined. Right now, canada has become the land of opportunity for oilmen. Theyll tell you theres little else on the horizon. Bob, if you take a tablet and put on it, where is supply going to come from that we dont know about today . And you put down all the optimistic points, that tablet will be basically blank. As blank as the landscape around Fort Mcmurray, where the world of Oil Exploration ends. You think the days of cheap oil are gone . Theyre gone. From what we knew as cheap oil, when i pump gasoline in ray smiths sinclair station on hinkley street in holdenville, oklahoma, 11¢ a gallon, thats gone. 1. 50 a gallon . We wont ever see 1. 50 a gallon. No, thatsthats gone. Right around the corner from Fort Mcmurray, you can still see oil being produced the traditional way. Its picturesque now. The wells are still pumping, but they belong to the past, like the iron horse that once rode across these prairies. The future . Up here in alberta, theyre convinced its in the dirt. [horn honks] since we first aired that story, the demand for oil extracted from Canadian Oil Sands has only grown in the u. S. , and its now the single largest source of imported oil, far more than from any opec country. To meet that demand, a new pipeline has been proposed to bring the oil directly from canada to refineries in texas. But there is growing concern about the Environmental Impact of that pipeline and of the oil sands in general. [ticking] our next story takes us to the continent of antarctica. Scott pelley uncovers startling physical evidence of how Global Warming is already starting to heat up our world when 60 minutes on cnbc returns. The world is changing faster than ever, creating new opportunities for those who stand ready to seize them. In a time when the biggest risk is playing it safe, we believe outshining the competition tomorrow requires challenging your Business Inside and out today. At cognizant, our flexible, collaborative approach helps forwardlooking companies not only run better, but run different. To give your customers every reason to keep looking for you. So if youre ready to see opportunities and see them through, we say lets get to work. Because now more than ever, the future belongs to those who challenge the present. [ passenger ] airport, please. Nks ] what airline . United. [ indian accent ] which airline, sir . [ passenger ] united. Whoa taxi [ british accent ] what airline, then . [ passenger ] united. All right. [ spanish ] what airline . [ passenger ] united. [ mandarin ] which airline . [ passenger ] united. [ arabic ] which airline . [ passenger ] united. [ italian ] where are we going . [ passenger ] united. [ male announcer ] more destinations than any other airline. [ thai ] which airline do you fly . [ passenger ] united. [ male announcer ] thats great, big world friendly. If you need proof that our world is getting warmer, you need look no further than the glaciers of antarctica. As scott pelley reported in 2007, the glaciers on that vast continent are melting at an alarming rate, and disappearing with the ice are whole colonies of penguins. Both are Early Warning signs that the Global Warming day of reckoning is upon us. To find out whats happening at the bottom of the world, we stop first at the high mountains of patagonia in chile, where you can actually see firsthand the consequences of a warming planet. This massive ice is glacier ohiggins. Its been frozen for tens of thousands of years in the mountains of southern chile. Ohiggins is spectacular for its beauty. [speaking in spanish] but for a scientist like gino casassa, its breathtaking for its speed. This was the glacier front position in 1896. Now ohiggins is morphing into a lake, retreating more than any glacier in south america. The glacier was sitting where we are sitting right now. We would have been covered by ice. I think its a very clear picture that the world is getting warmer and that the impacts which were projected even 10 or 20 years ago are happening right now. Ohiggins has fallen back nine miles in 100 years, throwing off icebergs that roll as they dissolve into the lake. Casassa took us to the face of ohiggins, carefully measuring our approach. Its a dynamic thing. Yeah, absolutely. Its cracking, popping, rumbling. There goes a big piece of it right here. Wow, there goeslook at that. And this is why you advise us not to get too close. Exactly. Casassa is a glaciologist who surprised us when he told us what he used to think of Global Warming. I just didnt believe in Global Warming i mean, in Global Warming being produced by mankind, by us contaminating the atmosphere. I just refused to believe that. Oh wow, wow. Look at that one. Well, theres a bit of your proof. Yeah, exactly. He says now the evidence has convinced him. We set out to find more evidence as casassa went to measure the height of ohiggins. We climbed to a spot where he crossed from earth to ice in 2004. You thought we were going to walk from here onto the ice. Now its water. And now look at it. We have a small problem now. Much to his surprise, theres 1,000 feet of water where he walked three years ago. We had to hike for hours to get to the ice, and when we got there, we found it blackened by earth and volcanic ash. Casassa set up a receiver to measure the distance from the top of ohiggins to satellites overhead. So you get a contour line of the top of the glacier as you go. As we walk, the receiver, which is in my backpack, is capturing data every one second. And the data showed him ohiggins has thinned 92 feet in seven years. Ohiggins is not unique. More than 90 of the worlds glaciers are retreating. And if youre looking for early trouble from Climate Change, this is it. Glacial runoff provides water for 1 1 2 billion people, mostly in south america, china, and india. In the medium term lets say, depending on the size of the glacier, 30 years, just a few decades the glacier will start to waste away in such a degree that you will see the runoff, the glacial melt coming from that glacier starting to decline. And these cities around the world will be starved for water. Exactly, so thats a major issue. And we see now the first impacts. We wanted to see the evidence of warming nearer the bottom of the world, so we set sail ast city south, ushuaia, argentina, on a twoday voyage to antarctica. Its more than 1,000 miles from glacier ohiggins in patagonia and across the Drake Passage to the antarctic peninsula. Here, we found theres green where the white used to be. On the coast in summer, theres grass where the scientists used to ski. This is paradise cove. Its home to fur seals, lazy elephant seals, and the chinstrap penguin. Theres the chin strap right there, right under the eye. American biologists sue and Wayne Trivelpiece were the first to discover trouble in paradise cove. How have these populations changed over the years . They have dropped by about 60 . 60 . Yup. The trivelpieces live in this tiny american outpost, where theyve studied penguins for more than 30 years. You know, im curious about the evolution. How long have there been penguins . Oh, millions of years. There have been sixfoot penguin fossils found. Six feet, tall as me. Yeah, and with teninch bills. And i really dont think id want to band one of those guys. [laughter] okay, closing around them. Banding modern penguins led the trivelpieces to their discovery. It starts with a roundup. Theyve squeezed i. D. Bands on 70,000 penguins to see if they survive their migration. Oh, excuse me. Its okay. Penguins migrate up to 5,000 miles in the Coldest Water on earth. And if you think penguins dont fly, youve never seen them underwater. They can hit up to 25 miles an hour. But after millions of years of this endurance, many chinstrap and Adelie Penguins arent surviving anymore. We knew something was drastically wrong, something had changed in the ocean. What did you think was happening . We didnt really know. We knew it had to be something that was going on once they left land and went to sea. [ticking] as well discover, the fate of those penguins may provide key clues about how fast our planet is heating up when 60 minutes on cnbc returns. When we made our commitment to the gulf, bp had two big goals help the gulf recover and learn from what happened so we could be a better, safer energy company. I can tell you safety is at the heart of everything we do. Weve added cuttingedge technology, like a new deepwater well cap and a stateoftheart monitoring center, where experts watch over all drilling activity twentyfourseven. And were sharing what weve learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. Our commitment has never been stronger. As scott pelley reports, solving the puzzle of what happened to the chinstrap penguins has lead researchers to some stark conclusions about the pace of Global Warming. [bird squeaking] and we love working with the chinstraps. Theyre far and away the most cooperative. But you know what, wayne . Im not sure they like working with you. Getting manhandled may ruffle their feathers, but it was key to discovering their fate. These are grown penguin chicks chasing their mothers for food, which she delivers beak to beak. Soon the chicks will go to sea to hunt for a shrimplike crustacean called krill. The krill grow beneath the sea ice, but in the warming ocean, the sea ice is melting away. So the penguins have been going to sea and starving to death . The chicks are declining, and we think they just cant find the krill. You know, when you can link a change in warming in air temperature through ice to krill, to penguins and show a 50 reduction of the penguin populations here and connect all the dots, you really cant make it any clearer than that. If its clear the south is warming, Paul Mayewski is here to find out why. Were just on the edge of something that is potentially going to be much, much bigger. Mayewski is among the most accomplished antarctic scientists. Hes director of the Climate Change institute at the university of maine, and hes been exploring antarctica since 1968. Theyve even named a mountain after him here. What are some of the questions, some of the Big Questions youd like to answer here . Oh, wed of course like to be able to demonstrate that over the last few thousand years, this temperature change truly is different. Is warming caused by mans pollution in the atmosphere . Just keep pulling on that till its tight around your legs. Mayewski says the answer is right under our feet. So with the help of scientists from polands arctowski research station, we set out to climb to the top of a glacier that was fractured by deep crevasses covered in snow. Antarctica is 1 1 2 times the size of the United States, and its covered in ice that averages a mile in thickness. And so this is the top. This is the top of the plateau. Spectacular 360degree view. Paul, thats science the hard way. Yup. But if you want to learn about the climate, youve got to get here and youve got to experience the place. One of the reasons you work so hard to get to a place like this is because its just about as remote as you can imagine. Just listen for a second. Nothing. Dead silence. Were up on the warsaw plateau. Its about 1,500 feet or so from sea level on King George Island in antarctica. The other reason you come here is to see some of the most dramatic evidence anywhere in the world of Climate Change. Over the past 50 years, this region the antarctic peninsula, the northwestern part, and the islands around it has been going up in temperature about one degree every decade, and that makes the region the fastestwarming place on earth. Mayewski is here to drill an ice core, because when ice is laid down, it captures everything in the air. Drilling down is drilling through time. Well, the ice cores are really the only way we have of demonstrating what Greenhouse Gas levels were like prior to their first measurement by humans, which is really 1957 or so. By chemically analyzing the core, he can see what was in the air thousands of years ago. One more sample will do it. Back in maine, mayewski has a vault of hundreds of cores. He once led a team that drilled a glacier core two miles deep. He and his colleagues have found some of the most powerful evidence that man is changing the climate. What do the ice cores tell you about Greenhouse Gases . Now we know from the ice core record that itsthe levels and the speed of rise are significantly, significantly greater than anything in the last 850,000 years. And the levels that we expect to get by the end of the century are going to be double what we have today. Mayewski and his colleagues have timed the sudden rise in Greenhouse Gases to the start of the Industrial Revolution about 150 years ago. If, as expected, Greenhouse Gas pollution doubles by the end of this century, temperatures are predicted to rise four to six degrees. You could very well see sea level rises on the order of several feet and perhaps even several tens of feet. If sea level were to rise like that, there would be tremendous changes, immense migrations. You would potentially have millions, hundreds of millions of people whod have to move inland. It would be the largest catastrophe that the modern world had experienced. That rise in se would play out over decades, but some of it may be inevitable. It turns out that many Greenhouse Gases last a long time in the atmosphere, and theres a lot up there opped every auto every factory, every emission of a Greenhouse Gas today, would the world continue to warm . It would certainly for a while. It is important that everybody really begin to make reductions in Greenhouse Gases and all of the toxic elements that go along with it in order to impact or to have a change in the future. And once we start, its not going to be an immediate solution. Were going to have to pay for a while for what weve done. Since this story first aired, neither the United Nations nor the United States congress have been able to reach a consensus within their own organizations for cutting Greenhouse Gas emissions. Meanwhile, according to nasa, the decade ending in 2009 was the warmest on record. Thats this edition of 60 minutes on cnbc. Im steve kroft. Thanks for joining us. Captioning by captionmax www. Captionmax. 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