This
invites these comments by Guy McPherson:
“This
is stupid, although it mirrors what the UN Advisory Group on
Greenhouse Gases reported in October 1990: 'the most dangerous
effects of a warming climate – sea level rise, Arctic ice melt,
extreme weather – would begin kicking in with a global temperature
rise of 1C.' Apparently they've not noticed the self-reinforcing
feedback loops initiated at 0.85 C.
UN's
2C target will fail to avoid a climate disaster, scientists warn
Global
warming limit agreed is too late and dangerous as a 1C rise in
temperature will trigger catastrophic events, study says
A house on the beach of Doun Baba Dieye, northern Senegal, lies in ruins after sea level rise. Photograph: Seyllou/AFP/Getty Images
3
December 2013
The
limit of 2C of global warming agreed by the world's governments is a
"dangerous target", "foolhardy" and will not
avoid the most disastrous consequences of climate change, new
research from a panel of eminent climate scientists warned on
Tuesday.
In
a new paper, the climate scientist Professor James Hansen and a team
of international experts found the most dangerous effects of a
warming climate – sea level rise, Arctic ice melt, extreme weather
– would begin kicking in with a global temperature rise of 1C.
Allowing
warming to reach 2C would be simply too late, Hansen said. "The
case we make is that 2C itself is a very dangerous target to be
aiming for," he told the Guardian. "Society should reassess
what are dangers levels, given the impacts that we have already
seen."
The
research, published in the peer-reviewed journal PLoS One, represents
Hansen's most public intervention so far into the world of climate
policy, following his retirement earlier in 2013 from Nasa's Goddard
Institute of Space Studies.
Hansen,
who left Nasa to be more free to act as a climate advocate, set up a
new climate policy programme at the Earth Institute in September. In
a separate action, he intervened in November in support of a law suit
demanding the federal government act to cut the greenhouse gas
emissions that cause climate change.
The
new study, however, was aimed at marshalling the expertise of 17
other climate and policy experts from the UK, Australia, France,
Sweden and Switzerland as well as the US, to outline the dangerous
consequences of sticking to the 2C warming target endorsed by the
United Nations and world leaders.
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned in its major in
October that the world had only about 30 years left before it
exhausted the rest of the 1,000 gigaton carbon emission budget
estimated to lead to 2C warming. But Hansen and his colleagues warned
that the UN target would not avoid dangerous consequences, even if it
kept within that carbon budget.
"Fossil
fuel emissions of 1,000 gigaton, sometimes associated with a 2C
global warming target, would be expected to cause large climate
change with disastrous consequences. The eventual warming from one
gigaton fossil fuel emissions likely would reach well over 2C, for
several reasons. With such emissions and temperature tendency, other
trace greenhouse gases including methane and nitrous oxide would be
expected to increase, adding to the effect of CO2," the
researchers said.
The
paper draws on multiple strands of evidence to make its case,
including the rapid decline of Arctic sea ice, mountain glaciers, and
the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, the expansion of hot, dry
subtropical zones, the increase in drought and wildfires, and the
loss of coral reefs because of ocean acidification.
"The
main point is that the 2C target – which is almost out of reach
now, or quickly becoming out of reach – is itself a dangerous
target because it leads to a world that is greatly destabilised by
rising sea levels and massive changes of climate patterns in
different parts of the world," said Professor Jeff Sachs,
director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, one of the
PLoS paper's authors.
An
even bigger problem however was that the international community was
far from even reaching that inadequate target, Sachs said. "Right
now we are completely off track globally," he said. "We are
certainly not even in the same world as a 1C world. We are not even
in a 2C world."
The
paper goes on to urge immediate cuts in global emissions of 6% a year
as well as ambitious reforestation efforts to try to keep
temperatures in check. The paper acknowledges such actions would be
"exceedingly difficult" to achieve, but says it is urgent
to begin reductions now, rather than wait until future decades.
It
warns that the targets will remain far out of reach so long with
continued exploitation of fossil fuels, such as coal burning for
electricity and continued exploitation of unconventional oil and gas.
The
paper also offers prescriptions, urging the adoption of a direct
carbon tax at point of production and entry. "Our policy
implication is that we have to have a carbon fee and some of the
major countries need to agree on that and if that were done it would
be possible to actually get global emissions to begin to come down
rapidly I think," Hansen said.
The
study also calls for an expansion of nuclear power – which will be
controversial for environmental groups. Hansen has long been an
advocate for nuclear power as a solution to climate change, and he
has been critical of environmental groups for not coming on board.
"Surely
a few decades ago it made sense to be very cautious about any further
expansion of nuclear power but a lot has happened over last few
decades," Hansen said. "Climate change is going to be
uncontrollable if we can't get carbon-free electricity ...
Environmental groups need to look at the real world."
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