Title: Climate science: what do we know
1Climate science what do we know?
Lucka Kajfe Bogataj WG2 former Vice-chair,
IPCC University of Ljubljana Slovenia
221st Century changes in climate
- Four distinctive characteristics
- They are cumulative
- The effects are irreversible
- Large time lags todays actions are tomorrows
problems - They are global
3Evolution of international climate policy
- 1898 Swedish scientist Svante Ahrrenius warns
carbon dioxide from coal and oil burning could
warm the planet - 1979 First World Climate Conference organised by
WMO - 1988 NASA scientist James Hansen tells U.S.
Congress global warming "is already happening
now'' - Creation of the IPCC
- 1992 UNFCCC aims at stabilising atmospheric
concentrations of GHG - 1997 UNFCCC parties approve Kyoto Protocol
mandating emission cuts by industrial nations - 2005 Kyoto Protocol takes effect
4Changes in global average surface temperature
Eleven of the last twelve years rank among the
twelve warmest years in the instrumental record
of global surface temperature
5It is warmer across the globe than it was a
century ago
Globally averaged, the planet is 0.8C warmer
than it was in 1860
6Drought is increasing most places
Spatial pattern of the monthly Palmer Drought
Severity Index (PDSI) for 1900 to 2002.
7Evidence for reality of climate change
Glaciers melting
Muir Glacier, Alaska
1909 Toboggan Glacier Alaska 2000
1900 2003 Alpine glacier, Austria
8Shrinking Arctic Ice Caps
ACIA (2004, 2008)
9Global natural disasters 1980 2008Geophysical,
meteorological, hydrological events
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11 IT IS NOT THE SUN.. http//www.pmodwrc.ch/pmod.ph
p?topictsi/composite/SolarConstant
12What are the drivers?
- Population growth, movement and age structures
- Land use change
- Economic growth
- Geo-political changes and realignments
- Trade and subsidies
- Resource competition
- Urbanization
- Technological changes
13 Observed
14Drivers of Anthropogenic Emissions
1.5
1.5
1.5
World
1.4
1.4
1.4
1.3
1.3
1.3
1.2
1.2
1.2
1.1
1.1
1.1
1
1
1
Factor (relative to 1990
0.9
0.9
0.9
0.8
0.8
0.8
Emissions
F (emissions)
P (population)
0.7
0.7
0.7
g G/P
0.6
0.6
0.6
h F/G
0.5
0.5
0.5
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
1980
Raupach et al 2007, PNAS
15Carbon dioxide emissions
Global atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse
gases (GHG) increased markedly as a result of
human activities, with an increase of 70 in
1970-2004
16Fate of Anthropogenic CO2 Emissions (2000-2006)
1.5 Pg C y-1
Canadell et al. 2007, PNAS
17CO2 in the Atmosphere
The fraction of CO2 remaining in the air, after
emission by fossil fuel burning, declines rapidly
at first, but 1/3 remains in the air after a
century and 1/5 after a millennium (Atmos. Chem.
Phys. 7, 2287-2312, 2007).
18Additional physics incorporated in successive
climate models
19Global temperature change
1 0.5 0
Temperature anomaly
1900 1950
2000 Year
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21We are running out of atmosphere much faster than
fossil fuels
22Ranges for predicted surface warming
Continued emissions would lead to further warming
of 1.1ºC to 6.4ºC over the 21st century (best
estimates 1.8ºC - 4ºC)
23WAY TO UNKNOWN
24Settlements No-Go Areas
Tropical Hurricanes
Earthquakes
MM modified Mercalli scale
25Settlements No-Go Areas Additional Climate
Change Impacts
Permafrost thaw
e.g.,
Increase in heatwaves
e.g.,
Dangerous sea level rise
e.g.,
Increase in droughts
Increase in heavy rain
e.g.,
e.g.,
Tropical Hurricanes
Earthquakes
MM modified Mercalli scale
26A global shift southward
PRUDENCE project Results based on HadRM3H
27Agro-Economic Vulnerability to Future Climate
Change
28Five human development tipping points
- Reduced agricultural productivity
- Heightened water insecurity
- Increased exposure to extreme weather events
- Collapse of ecosystems
- Increased health risks
29Climate change is a Multiplier for Instability
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31Facing the dangers from climate change
- there are only three options
- Mitigation, meaning measures to reduce the pace
magnitude of the changes in global climate being
caused by human activities. - Adaptation, meaning measures to reduce the
adverse impacts on human well-being resulting
from the changes in climate that do occur. - Suffering the adverse impacts that are not
avoided by either mitigation or adaptation.
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33Per capita fossil fuel CO2 emissions
Today 1750-2007
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35 Probabilities (in ) of exceeding a temperature
increase at equilibrium
Unmanageable
Currently at 430 ppm, rising at 2.5 ppm p.a. and
this rate of increase is increasing
Source Hadley Centre From Murphy et al. 2004
36 Probabilities (in ) of exceeding a temperature
increase
Currently at 430 ppm, rising at 2.5 ppm p.a. and
this rate of increase is increasing
Source Hadley Centre From Murphy et al. 2004
37RUSSIAN ROULETTE
Probability to survive 5/6 or 83
38Options for reductions
- Reduce growth of energy use by
- reducing population growth
- reducing growth of GDP/person
- reducing E/GDP ratio by
- increasing efficiency of conversion to end-use
forms - increasing technical efficiency of energy end-use
- changing mix of economic activities
- Reduce CO2/E ratio by
- substituting natural gas for oil coal
- replacing fossil fuels with renewables
- replacing fossil fuels with nuclear energy
- capturing sequestering CO2 from fossil-fuel use
39The costs of stabilising the climate are
manageable delay would be dangerous and much
more costly
Damages from climate change rise
disproportionately with temperature !!! (A 25
increase in storm wind speeds is associated with
an almost 7-fold increase in damages to
buildings).
- Climate change could lead to floods, massive
population shifts, and wars over natural
resources. - Ecosystems are unlikely to be able to adapt at
the rapid rates of change expected.
Stern Review (2006)
40Dreaming about other solutions...
41ADAPTATION
- adjustments in ecological, social or economic
systems in response to actual or expected climate
stimuli and their impacts - ...to moderate damages or to benefit from
opportunities associated with climate change
42- Considering the risks, why aren't these issues
- higher on policy agendas?
43Science and government are marked by very
distinct behaviours and attributes
- Science
- Probability accepted
- Anticipatory
- Flexibility
- Problem oriented
- Discovery oriented
- Failure and risk accepted
- Innovation prized
- Replication essential for belief
- Government
- Certainty desired
- Time ends at next election
- Rigidity
- Service oriented
- Mission oriented
- Failure and risk intolerable
- Innovation suspected
- Beliefs are situational
44A DOUBLE global crisis unfolds
- In the prime of globalization, we are
experiencing an accumulation of - AT LEAST 2 interrelated crises,
- mutually feeding on each other
- Climate change crisis
- Financial and economic crisis
- AND oil and energy crisis, Food (and WATER)
crisis
45Spend or save? ON CLIMATE CRISIS
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47Green investments as a percentage of economic
recovery stimulus packages
Stern
http//image.guardian.co.uk/sys-files/Guardian/doc
uments/2009/02/23/ENVIRONMENTweb.pdf
48- Increasing energy efficiency
- Upgrading physical infrastructure
- Supporting clean technology markets
- Initiating flagship projects
- Enhancing international research and development
- Incentivising investment
- Coordinating efforts
49- Increasing energy efficiency (in buildings,
appliances, fuel efficiency standards, vehicle
taxation, improving urban planning) - Upgrading physical infrastructure (electricity
grid upgrades, public transportation, integrated
freight transport systems and CO2 pipelines for
CCS) - Supporting clean technology markets (facilitate
the financing of clean technology projects,
renewable portfolio standards, production tax
credits and loans) - Initiating flagship projects (large-scale
demonstration projects for CCS, concentrated
solar power, biofuels from ligno-cellulosic
biomass, power storage and integrated hydrogen
systems) - Enhancing international research and development
(tripling of spending on RD related to energy
efficiency, renewables, and CCS) - Incentivising investment (strong commitment to
pricing carbon across all sectors and regions) - Coordinating efforts (commitment to an open
trading system, refrain from discriminatory
provisions in national stimulus packages.
50Climate Change and the United States
The issue of climate change is one that we
ignore at our own peril Not only is it real,
it's here, and its effects are giving rise to
a frighteningly new global phenomenon the
man-made natural disaster.
Barack Obama, President of the United
States, Jan. 2009 (Inauguration speech)
51Silvio Berlusconi, December 2008
It is absurd, in our times of crisis, to talk
about the emissions of greenhouse gases this is
as if someone, who suffers from pneumonia, would
think about having a perm (permanent hair
styling) rtv.de 15.12. 2008
52Key policies NEEDED
- Improving scientific understanding of the issues
at stake - Promoting research development and technology
transfer - Informing and educating
- Mainstreaming environmental policies in decision
making - Internalising the environmental costs of economic
activity - E.g. effective carbon-price signal
- Effective policies are those that provide
long-term signals and incentives on a predictable
basis
53 Human-driven erosion of resilience
Source IGBP 2007
54CONCLUSIONSConcerning our optionsMitigation,
Adaptation, Suffering
- Were already doing some of each.
- Whats up for grabs is the future mix.
- Minimizing the amount of suffering in that mix
can only be achieved by doing a lot of mitigation
and a lot of adaptation. - Mitigation alone wont work because climate
change is already occurring cant be stopped
quickly. - Adaptation alone wont work because adaptation
gets costlier less effective as climate change
grows. - We need enough mitigation to avoid the
unmanage-able, enough adaptation to manage the
unavoidable.