Title: Another appeal to reason: dont try to look cool
1Another appeal to reason dont try to look cool
- Dr Simon Dietz
- London School of Economics
2The real state of climate science
3Climate facts
- Effectively certain (i.e. beyond reasonable
doubt) - Burning fossil fuels is the largest single cause
of emissions of CO2 - Atmospheric CO2 concentrations are increasing,
and have done so since the beginning of the
industrial revolution - CO2 is a greenhouse gas
- Global warming is occurring at rates that are
unprecedented in human history (and beyond) - The rate of warming observed is consistent with
the observed changes in greenhouse gas
concentrations (and well founded estimates of the
greenhouse effect) - What more could one reasonably ask for?
4Remaining uncertainties
- The things we still dont know
- The mechanisms and magnitudes of feedbacks
between greenhouse gas concentrations and
radiative forcing, like clouds and changes in
the carbon cycle - The precise magnitude of natural effects
- The precise extent to which observed warming is
man-made - The key point these could just as well make
things worse than expected as better
5The real range of climate uncertainty
Probably a minor change manageable
Definitely a huge planetary change consider
living in space
6Can we just adapt to climate change?
7Adaptation is not free
- Cost of turning Bangladesh into the Netherlands?
- System of basic river dykes alone costing 16 of
Bangladeshi GDP
8Adaptation is not easy, especially when you dont
know what youre adapting to
?
??
9Evidence suggests we are not perfectly adapted
even to todays climate, even in rich countries
10How would you adapt to these things?
- Radical melting of the Greenland ice sheet
- Shutoff in the Atlantic thermohaline circulation
- Collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet
- Changes in the severity and frequency of El Niño
- Indian monsoon chaotic multistability
- Dieback of the Amazon rainforest
- Etc.
11We dont have one of these
Or rather we might its called reducing
greenhouse gas emissions
12Reducing emissions another form of adaptation
13We already have the technology to stabilise
greenhouse gases
14And it wont cost the Earth
Actual price of a permit in the EU Emissions
Trading Scheme
15Worth taking out the insurance? Most economists
think so
- Just as people spend a small slice of their
incomes on buying insurance on the off-chance
that their house might burn down, and nations use
a slice of taxpayers money to pay for standing
armies just in case a rival power might try to
invade them, so the world should invest a small
proportion of its resources in trying to avert
the risk of boiling the planet. The costs are not
huge. The dangers are. From The Economist,
November 2006