Here’s the Guardian telling us something we have long known. At least they've avoided the headline, "more than previously expected"
Hopes of mild climate change dashed by new research
Planet could heat up far more than hoped as new work shows temperature rises measured over recent decades don’t fully reflect global warming already in the pipeline
5 July, 2017
Hopes
that the world’s huge carbon emissions might not drive temperatures
up to dangerous levels have been dashed by new research.
The
work shows that temperature rises measured over recent decades do not
fully reflect the global warming already in the pipeline and that the
ultimate heating of the planet could be even worse than feared.
How
much global temperatures rise for a certain level of carbon emissions
is called climate sensitivity and is seen as the single most
important measure of climate change. Computer models have long
indicated a high level of sensitivity, up to 4.5C for a doubling of
CO2 in the atmosphere.
However
in recent years estimates of climate sensitivity based on historical
temperature records from the past century or so have suggested the
response might be no more than 3C. This would mean the planet could
be kept safe with lower cuts in emissions, which are easier to
achieve.
But
the new work, using both models and paleoclimate data from warming
periods in the Earth’s past, shows that the historical temperature
measurements do not reveal the slow heating of the planet’s oceans
that takes place for decades or centuries after CO2 has been added to
the atmosphere.
“The
hope was that climate sensitivity was lower and the Earth is not
going to warm as much,” said Cristian Proistosescu, at Harvard
University in the US, who led the new research. “There was this
wave of optimism.”
The
new research, published in the journal Science Advances, has ended
that. “The worrisome part is that all the models show there is an
amplification of the amount of warming in the future,” he said. The
situation might be even worse, as Proistosescu’s work shows climate
sensitivity could be as high as 6C.
Prof
Bill Collins, at the University of Reading, UK, and not part of the
new research, said: “Some have suggested that we might be lucky and
avoid dangerous climate change without taking determined action if
the climate is not very sensitive to CO2 emissions. This work
provides new evidence that that chance is remote.” He said greater
long term warming had implications for melting of the world’s ice
sheets and the rise of sea levels that already threatens many coastal
cities.Bad news for climate contrarians – 'the best data we have'
just got hotter
The
reason the historical temperature measurements indicated a lower
climate sensitivity than models or paleoclimate data is because the
Earth has a fast and a slow response to increases in carbon
emissions, Proistosescu said.
Land,
mostly in the northern hemisphere heats up quickly. But there is also
a slow response, he said: “This is mostly associated with warming
over the oceans. They are big and full of cold water, especially at
depth, and take a long time to heat up.” Furthermore, when the slow
warming does kick in, it is likely to reduce the cloud cover that
shades the Southern ocean and the eastern tropical Pacific,
amplifying the heating.
The
new research shows the 4.5C upper limit for climate sensitivity is
real and means projections for global temperature rises cannot be
reduced. The global temperature is likely to be 2.6C to 4.8C higher
by the end of the century if emissions are not cut, according to the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or 0.3C to 1.7C if sharp
emissions cuts begin in the next few years.
The
world may already be seeing the increasing rises in temperature, said
Prof Piers Forster at the University of Leeds, UK: “It may already
be happening – the rapid increase in temperatures since 2014 could
be partly due to the eastern Pacific catching up.”
Reconciling
all the estimates of climate sensitivity has also shown that climate
models are not flawed. “Historical observations give us a lot of
insight into how climate changes and are an important test of our
climate models,” said Prof Peter Huybers, a colleague of
Proistosescu’s at Harvard University.
“But there is no perfect
analogue for the changes that are coming.”
From 2008, when it was still possible to talk about this
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