Abrupt Climate Change Can Occur Even Before a 2-Degree Rise in Warming
By
Tim Radford, Climate News Network
18
October, 2015
LONDON—Climate
change could arrive with startling speed. New research has identified
at least 37 “tipping points” that would serve as evidence that
climate change has happened—and happened abruptly in one particular
region.
And
18 of them could happen even
before the world warms by an average of 2°C,
the proposed “safe limit” for global warming.
Weather
is what happens, climate is what people grow to expect from the
weather. So climate change, driven by global warming as a consequence
of rising carbon dioxide levels, in response to more than a century
of fossil fuel combustion, could be—for many people—gradual,
imperceptible and difficult to identify immediately.
But Sybren
Drijfhout,
of the University of Southampton in the UK and his collaborators in
France, the Netherlands and Germany, are not so sure.
They
report in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences that
they “screened” the massive ensemble of climate models that
inform the most recent reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, and found evidence of abrupt regional changes in the
ocean, the sea ice, the snow cover, the permafrost and in the
terrestrial biosphere that could happen as average global
temperatures reached a certain level.
The
models did not all simulate the same outcomes, but most of them did
predict one or more abrupt regional shifts.
No
safe limit
But
the future is not an exact science. “Our results show that the
different state-of-the-art models agree that abrupt changes are
likely, but that predicting when and where they will occur remains
very difficult,” said Professor Drijfhout. “Also, our results
show that no safe limit exists and that many abrupt shifts already
occur for global warming levels much lower than two degrees.”
The
idea of a “tipping point” for climate change has been around for
decades: the hypothesis is that a climate regime endures—perhaps
with an increasing frequency of heat waves or windstorms or floods—as
the average temperatures rise. However, at some point, there must be
a dramatic shift to a new set of norms.
The
researchers explore some of the telltale indicators of such abrupt
change. One of these would be the wholesale collapse of the Arctic
Ocean winter ice: the Arctic is expected to be largely
ice-free most
summers in the next few decades. Winter ice would then become
increasingly thin. Once sufficiently thin, warming and wave power
would do the rest, and tend to leave clear blue water even in the
coldest seasons.
Another
indicator would involve massive unexpected plankton blooms in the
Indian Ocean as a consequence of an upwelling of nutrient-rich waters
from the ocean bottom, in response to changes in the Asian monsoon
regime.
A
third would involve massive
snow melt on the Tibetan plateau:
in 20 years, the annual average snow cover could fall from 400
kilograms per square metre to a trifling 50g.
A
fourth signal would be massive
dieback in the Amazon rainforest over
a few decades, mainly because of reduced rainfall.
Early
signs
Yet
another telltale aspect of climate change has already been addressed
by Professor Drijfhout. It would be the
sudden, paradoxical dramatic drop in temperatures in the North
Atlantic,
as a response to global warming and a collapse of the ocean current
that carries warm surface water north, while denser,
colder and increasingly more saline water in the Arctic sinks to the
bottom and
flows back southward. This “overturning circulation” has already
seemed to weaken as the Arctic has warmed.
In
one of the team’s climate model simulations, the Atlantic
circulation system keeps ticking over until about 2020. For another
20 years, sea and air temperatures vary wildly and the ocean current
weakens much more swiftly. After about 2040, ice starts to form on
the North Atlantic. By 2060, the circulation system has collapsed and
the sea ice starts to spread.
“Increase
of sea ice in the whole Atlantic sector of the Arctic causes a
temperature decrease of more than 4 °C in a 20°-wide latitude band
(55°N-75°N), stretching from 60°W to 40°E”, the scientists say.
South of 40°N and outside the Atlantic, global warming continues.
Only a portion of oceans in northern Europe would see dramatic
cooling.
But
that is a result from only one model of a number which predict
varying levels of change for Europe.
The
researchers add that the models aren’t perfect: they don’t
simulate some things that really could happen, and perhaps show signs
of happening now. They conclude:
“An additional concern is that
the present generation of climate models still does not account for
several mechanisms that could potentially give rise to abrupt change.
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