This
should be read in conjunction with Sam Carana’s article - How
much warmer is it now?.
We are already at 1.73 deg Celsius above pre-industrial tempaertures
with a monthly peak of 2.37 deg. C.
Two
degrees no longer seen as global warming guardrail
2
April, 2018
Limiting
global warming to two degrees Celsius will not prevent destructive
and deadly climate impacts, as once hoped, dozens of experts
concluded in a score of scientific studies released Monday.
A
world that heats up by 2C (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) -- long regarded
as the temperature ceiling for a climate-safe planet -- could see
mass displacement due to rising seas, a drop in per capita income,
regional shortages of food and fresh water, and the loss of animal
and plant species at an accelerated speed.
Poor
and emerging countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America will get hit
hardest, according to the studies in the British Royal Society's
Philosophical Transactions A.
"We
are detecting large changes in climate impacts for a 2C world, and so
should take steps to avoid this," said lead editor Dann
Mitchell, an assistant professor at the University of Bristol.
The
Paris agreement: key points
The
197-nation Paris climate treaty, inked in 2015, vows to halt warming
at "well under" 2C compared to mid-19th century levels, and
"pursue efforts" to cap the rise at 1.5C.
UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Thursday said climate change
was "the most systemic threat to humankind".
-
Time to adapt -
With
only one degree of warming so far, Earth has seen a crescendo of
droughts, heatwaves, and storms ramped up by rising seas.
Voluntary
national pledges made under the Paris pact to cut CO2 emissions, if
fulfilled, would yield a 3C world at best.
The
treaty also requires that -- by the end of the century -- humanity
stop adding more greenhouse gases to the atmosphere than oceans and
forests can absorb, a threshold known as "net zero emissions".
"How
fast we get to a 2C world" is critical, Mitchell told AFP.
"If
it only takes a couple of decades, we will be in trouble because we
won't have time to adapt to the climate."
Among
the conclusions found in the new studies:
-
Economic growth -
Researchers
led by Felix Pretis, an economist at the University of Oxford,
predict that two degrees of global warming will see GDP per person
drop, on average, 13 percent by 2100, once costly climate change
impacts are factored in.
A
2C world will also "show significant negative impact on the
rates of economic growth," Pretis told AFP. Under a 1.5C
scenario, he added, growth projections "are near
indistinguishable from current conditions."
-
Rising seas -
Under
a 2C scenario, oceans rise about half a metre over the course of the
21th century, but well over a metre by 2300, another study found.
"When
the planet warms, it takes the ocean hundreds, if not thousands, of
years to fully respond," lead author Rober Nicholls, a professor
of coastal engineering at the University of Southampton, told AFP.
That's
bad news for 500 million people living in "highly vulnerable"
low-lying deltas, mainly in Asia, along with some 400 million people
in coastal cities, many of which are already sinking due
over-construction or collapsing water tables.
Even
in a 2C world, the number of people affected year by flooding could
approach 200 million by 2300, the study calculated.
-
Food, water stress -
Two
degrees of warming would spare humanity much misery compared to our
current trajectory, but would still lead to increased drought,
flooding, heatwaves and the disruption of weather patterns.
Some
regions will be hit worse than others, as will countries with
rainfall-dependent agriculture, a team by Richard Betts, head of
climate impacts research at the University of Exeter found.
The
countries that show "the greatest increase in vulnerability to
food insecurity when moving from the present-day climate to 2C global
warming are Oman, India, Bangladesh, Saudi Arabia and Brazil,"
he told AFP.
-
1.5C vs. 2C -
A
draft "special report" by the UN climate science panel to
be unveiled in October, obtained by AFP, concludes that "holding
warming at 1.5C by the end of the 21st century (is) extremely
unlikely."
At
current rates, the greenhouse gas emissions putting that goal out of
reach will have been released within 10 to 15 years.
Meanwhile,
CO2 emissions -- after remaining stable for three years, raising
hopes that they had peaked -- rose by 1.4 percent in 2017, the
International Energy Agency said this week.
But
every tenth-of-a-degree counts, said Mitchell.
"Even
if we can't limit global temperature increase to 1.5C, but can limit
it to 1.7C or 1.8C, this is still hugely more beneficial than just
giving up," he told AFP.
"We
can still keep temperatures well below 2 degrees," said Myles
Allen, a professor of geosystem science at the University of Oxford a
co-author on several of the studies.
But
doing so requires that "we start now and reduce emissions
steadily to zero in the second have of the century," he told
AFP.
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