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Projection and Mitigation of Global Climate Change

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Title: Slide 1 Author: BPRC Last modified by: Jialin Lin Created Date: 9/16/2005 4:11:28 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Projection and Mitigation of Global Climate Change


1
Projection and Mitigation of Global Climate Change
2
Review of last lecture
  • 3 ways human activities affect the climate.
  • Rapid increase of greenhouse gases (CO2, CH4,
    N2O) since 1750 far exceed pre-industrial values
    determined from ice core measurements spanning
    the last 650,000 years, which is mainly caused by
    CO2 fossil fuel use. Lead to strong radiative
    heating.
  • The developed countries and developing countries
    contribute almost equally to the emissions of
    GHGs.
  • Observed change of mean air temperature, ocean
    temperature, melting of arctic sea ice, Greenland
    ice sheet, snow and glaciers, rising of sea
    level.
  • Observed change of extreme events extreme
    precipitation events, heat waves, strongest
    hurricanes

3
Global connections
4
The most common atmospheric circulation structure
H
L
Radiation Convection
Conduction
Cooling or No Heating
Heating
Greenhouse Gases Pollution
Clouds Precipitation (Latent heat)
Latent/Sensible
H
L
Biosphere Land/Ocean/Ice/Stratosphere Feedback
  • Imbalance of heating
  • Imbalance of temperature
  • Imbalance of pressure
  • ? Wind

5
Framework of Earth System Model
Atmosphere
Biogeochemistry
Coupler .
Sea Ice
Ocean
Land
  • Include 5 components atmosphere, ocean, land,
    sea ice, biogeochemistry
  • Based on the conservation laws of mass, energy,
    momentum, water vapor and other chemical species
    (e.g. CO2, CH4)
  • Based on future assumptions of external forcing
    (GHG concentrations, solar variability,
    pollution, land use changes)

6
Can the GCMs Reproduce the 20th Century
Temperature Trend?
The GCMs can reproduce the 20th century
temperature trend
The warming is caused by anthropogenic forcings!
7
Simulations for Different Regions
Warming is caused by anthropogenic forcings
8
Movie timeA global warning?
9
Our choice of the future Emission scenarios
10
Projected Change in Global Mean Temperature
11
Global map of projected change Temperature
Largest warming over Arctic, larger over land
Precipitation Increase in tropics/poles,
decrease in mid-latitudes
12
Projected change of sea ice and ocean
13
Projected Change in Global Sea Level
14
Number of Days over 100 oF
15
Impacts on fresh water
16
Impacts on ecosystems
4.0 oC
3.0 oC
Poison ivy loves CO2
17
Abrupt climate change and tipping point Lesson
from Earths climate history
18
Examples of tipping points
19
Movie time!Six Degrees Could Change the World
20
Mitigation of global climate change
21
International Kyoto protocol
  • Negotiated in 1997. Commits parties to
    internationally binding emission reduction
    targets.
  • Common but differentiated responsibilities
  • Specific reduction targets for developed
    countries
  • Measures to slow the growth of emissions in
    developing countries
  • Non-parties
  • Canada
  • USA
  • Andorra
  • South Sudan
  • Palestine
  • Vatican City

22
Business Green Economy
  • Sustainability
  • Human rights and dignity
  • Accountability
  • Efficiency
  • Investment in the future

Renewable energy, Sustainable transportation,
Green buildings, Energy-efficient industry and
carbon capture, Land management, afforestation,
waste management
23
Green economy
24
What can we do?
  • The consumer-driven economy

25
Summary
  • Global climate models Earth system models (5
    components)
  • Global climate models can reproduce the observed
    warming in the 20th century. The warming is
    largely caused by human activities.
  • Projected change mean temperature (largest
    warming over Arctic, larger over land), mean
    precipitation, sea level, extreme temperature,
    extreme precipitation, fresh water, ecosystems
  • Abrupt climate change and tipping points
  • Future climate scenarios show that reducing
    greenhouse gas emissions can substantially
    mitigate warming in the latter half of this
    century.
  • Mitigation International (Kyoto Protocol), Green
    economy (Renewable energy, Sustainable
    transportation, Green buildings, Energy-efficient
    industry and carbon capture, Land management,
    afforestation, waste management)
  • We can make a difference by reducing waste of
    energy, food and other materials, and by
    purchasing environment-friendly products.

26
Work cited
  • http//intercongreen.com/2010/03/15/green-building
    -ebbs-slightly-in-recession-but-sentiment-remains-
    strong/
  • http//nimbuseco.com/2013/01/deforestation-and-pol
    lution-facts/
  • http//greenbalkans.org/category.php?languageen_E
    Ncat_id63
  • http//www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detail/ia
    /newsroom/releases/?cidnrcs142p2_011847
  • http//www.csiro.au/en/Portals/Multimedia/On-the-r
    ecord/Megan-Clark-presentation-20090526-generating
    -industries/Post-Combustion-Carbon-Capture.aspx
  • http//economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2
    005/09/the_consumer_dr.html
  • http//nca2009.globalchange.gov/human-health
  • http//yosemite.epa.gov/ee/epa/eerm.nsf/vwAN/EE-05
    64-112.pdf/file/EE-0564-112.pdf
  • http//livinggreenmag.com/2012/06/13/climate-chang
    e/scientists-warn-that-earth-is-close-to-climate-t
    ipping-point/
  • http//www.cnn.com/2013/05/29/opinion/mystreet-dig
    ital-anthropology/
  • http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileWorld-airli
    ne-routemap-2009.png
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