Title: Climate Change Facts and Impacts
1Climate Change Facts and Impacts
- Dr Jim Salinger
- National Institute of Water Atmospheric
Research, Auckland, NZ
Talking,Walking Sustainability Conference, 20-23
February 2007
2Outline
Current evidence - trends in temperature and
greenhouse gases - observed impacts Future
climate - Trends - Impacts Dangerous
anthropogenic interference
3Current evidence The warming of the climate
system is unequivocal
Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, as
is now evident from observations of increases in
global average air temperatures, widespread
melting of snow and ice, and rising global mean
sea level Most of the observed increase in
globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th
century is very likely due to the increase in
greenhouse gas concentrations Very likely
gt 90 likelihood
IPCC AR4
4Current evidence Global mean surface
temperatures keep warming
- Global temperatures have increased by some 0.7C
over the 20th century - 19 out of 20 warmest years on record occurred
since 1980 - 1998 and 2005 were the two warmest years on
record
UK Met Office, Hadley Centre, 2006
5Current Evidence All continental regions have
warmed except Antarctica
MODELS
All drivers
Natural drivers only
6Current evidence New Zealand temperatures have
warmed
- New Zealand temperatures have increased by some
0.9C since the 20th century - 1998 and 1999 were the two warmest years on
record
7Current evidence Unequivocal warming
- - Atmosphere, oceans, ice, land
- - Richer more compelling story
- 100-yr temperature trend 0.74C/century
- - Last 50 years is double that
- - 11 of last 12 years warmest on record
- - Heat island effect negligible
- - Satellite record reconciled with balloons
surface measurements
8Current evidence Greenhouse gases far exceed
pre-industrial going back 650,000 yrs
1780ppb
380ppm
Source Petit et al., Nature, 1999, Berger
Loutre, QSR, 1991
9Current evidence Human activities dominant cause
of increases
- Since 1750
- carbon dioxide increase 35, now 380 ppm
- methane increase 150, now 1780 ppb
- Nitrous oxide increase 18, now 319 ppb
- Human activities now emit annually 7,000,000,000
tonnes (7 ppm) of carbon dioxide - about half of
this stays in the atmosphere - About ¾ anthropogenic CO2 emissions in last 20
years from fossil fuel burning - It is virtually certain that human activities
have been the dominant cause of increases in
greenhouse gases and aerosols in the past 250
years
Carbon dioxide, ppm
10Current evidence Human activities are effecting
climate
There is very high confidence that the globally
averaged net effect of human activities since
1750 has been one of warming IPCC AR4 (Assessment
Report 4) 2007
- To explain early 20th century warming requires
- - solar changes,
- - less volcanic activity
- To explain warming in the late 20th century
requires - - greenhouse gases
- Solar and volcanic effects explain much of the
variability prior to 1850
Source www.wikipedia.org, based on Meehl et al.
(2004). J. Climate
11Current evidence The amount of ice on Earth is
decreasing
- There has been widespread loss of mountain
glaciers since the end of the 19th century - The rate of mass loss from glaciers and the
Greenland ice sheet is increasing - The recession of glaciers during last century is
larger than at any time over the last 5,000
years, being particularly fast in the 1930s,
1940s and after 1990 - Arctic and Antarctic ice shelves several
thousand years old have started to collapse due
to warming
Mt Kilimanjaro
12Current evidence Arctic sea ice is declining
- Arctic sea ice extent has declined from 7.2 to
5.2 million sq km since 1979 - Annual averaged Arctic sea ice has shrunk by
2.7 per decade since 1978, with summer minimum
by 7.4 per decade
Source U.S. National Snow Ice Data Center
(NSIDC)
13Current evidence Species shift polewards
- Species ranges have shifted polewards and to
higher elevations in the last 25 years - Altered timing of spring events (earlier) have
been reported for a broad multitude of species
for budding, flowering, egg laying, early
migration, etc., advancing by 10 days in the last
30 years - Observed changes in many physical and biological
systems consistent with a warming world - The majority (gt85 of the gt29,000 datasets
respond in the expected direction
km
Source Hickling et al 2006
Source Root et al 2005
14Current evidence European heat wave 2003
Comparison with Swiss summer temperatures (JJA),
1864 - 2000
Schär et al, Nature, Jan 2004
- 35000 deaths are directly attributable to the
2003 European heat wave - As this may not have occurred without
anthropogenic climate change, these may be the
first casualties of climate change
15Current evidence Species shift polewards
- Observed changes in many physical and biological
systems consistent with a warming world - The majority (gt85 of the gt29,000 datasets
respond in the expected direction expected as a
response to warming - This shows a discernible influence on changes in
many natural systems
16Future climate projections
If current climate science is even only roughly
correct, then the projected rate of warming
during the 21st century is very likely to be
without precedent during at least the last 10,000
years IPCC, 2001
- 1000 to 1861, N. Hemisphere, proxy data
- 1861 to 2000 Global, Instrumental
- 2000 to 2100, SRES projections
17Future Climate Global
- Globally averaged surface temperature
sensitivity is projected to be 2 4.5C with
the most likely value of about 3C - The middle and upper end of the projections are
without precedent in at least the last 10,000
years
Carbon dioxide, temperature and sea level
continue to rise after carbon dioxide emissions
reduced
18Future Climate Global
Projected range of global mean annual temperature
change by 2025, 2055 and 2085 for 6 scenarios and
5 CO2 stabilisation profiles
19Future Climate New Zealand
- 1.5 2C warmer
- Decrease in frosts
- Increase in number of days above 25C
- More evaporation
- More frequent westerly winds
- Heavy rain more frequent
- More El Niño-like ?
- Sea Level 30 cm (5 - 70)
- More droughts in eastern New Zealand
- Increased rural fire risk
Average recurrence interval (years) for drought
20Climate impacts Coral bleaching
- Loss of corals due to bleaching are very likely
over the next 50 years, especially for the Great
Barrier Reef and Caribbean Reefs - Corals could become rare on tropical and
subtropical reefs due to increasing
concentrations of carbon dioxide, and increasing
frequency of bleaching events by 2050
USGRP, 2000
21Climate impacts Human mortality
- By 2030, droughts will increase hunger and
malnutrition, especially in Africa - By 2030 coastal flooding is projected to result
in a large proportional mortality increase.
Overall a 2 to 3 fold increase of population to
be flooded is expected by 2080 - Significant increases of people at risk of
deaths from heating are estimated for this
century
Paris Deaths, summer 2003
22Dangerous anthropogenic interference Thresholds
From Schneider, in Avoiding Dangerous Climate
Change, 2006
23Dangerous anthropogenic interference Climate
Uncertainties
- Climate Sensitivity
- How strongly climate responds to increased CO2
levels - IPCC AR4 puts this in the range 2 to 4.5C
24Dangerous anthropogenic interference
Thermohaline circulation
- THC (Thermohaline Circulation) / MOC (Meridional
Overturning Circulation) driven by formation
sinking of denser water primarily in N Atlantic
and around Antarctic coast. Enhances some
wind-driven surface currents e.g. Gulf Stream. - Younger Dryas (13-11 ky ago) Probable cause
freshwater from outburst flood of Lake Aggasiz
deglaciation -- temporarily slowed or shut down
Atlantic THC, with a 2 - 6C cooling of the North
Atlantic region. Rapid onset. - Most climate models predict weakening of the MOC
over the next 100 years - For this period modelled local cooling is
outweighed by global warming - Temperatures
over the North Atlantic and Europe still
projected to increase
25Dangerous anthropogenic interference Melting
icecaps
- Greenland Central thickening more than offset by
increased melting near coast. - Ice loss has accelerated (1993-2003 cf 1961-2003)
- Nett loss 240 km3 in 2005 (Chen et al,2006)
- 1993 to 2003 50 to 100Gt loss/y (0.14 to 0.28
mm sea level equiv) - Some outlet glaciers accelerating
- Antarctica
- Some outlet glaciers accelerating
- Ice sheet mass-balance 50 to -200 Gt/y for
1993-2003 ( -0.14 to 0.55 SLE) - Ice loss might have accelerated. (Not certain. If
so less than Greenland)
- New issues
- Breakoff of ice-shelves might regionally
destabilise ice-sheet - Surface meltwater ? crevasse ? base lubrication
? speedup of ice stream - 2-4C gives a commitment to widespread ice-sheet
deglaciation and potential for sea level rise of
several metres
26Dangerous anthropogenic interference Further
ocean acidification likely
- Surface ocean pH has decreased by 0.1 since 1750
- Further 0.3-0.4 pH reduction projected by end
21st C under IS92a scenario - Carbonate ion concentrations projected to
decrease too
Scientific American March 2006
27Dangerous anthropogenic interference Ocean
acidification
Less acidic
More acidic
- Potential deleterious effects on coral reefs and
their ecosystems - Marine ecosystems become less robust especially
plankton species, and particularly in the
Southern Oceans
28Summary
Evidence is overwhelming if widespread warming in
the climate system The principal cause is
increasing greenhouse gases from human
activities Abundant evidence of observed impacts
already widespread melting of ice, biota
shifting polewards and increased deaths from
heatwaves Future climate expected to warm 2-4.5
C with more floods and droughts Future impacts
will be widespread e.g coral bleaching,
heatwave deaths Some suggest a target of no more
than 2 C global temperature rise above 19th
century values to prevent dangerous anthropogenic
interference Critical uncertainties exist for the
climate sensitivity, melting of Greenland and
Antarctic ice sheets and ocean acidification
impacts Prevention of the 2 C global temperature
rise threshold requires very large reductions in
emissions (70)
29(No Transcript)