Title: Rising Temperatures
1Rising Temperatures
2Various Temperature Reconstructions from 200-2008
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4Arctic Air Temperatures from Proxies (blue) and
Observed Temperatures (red)
5Temperatures from Proxies and Instruments for
Last 1,800 Years
- The current temperature rise is unprecedented
- It coincides with the Industrial Revolution and
the exponential population growth - It also coincides with the rapid rise in
greenhouse gas emissions
6Radiative and Net Climate Forcing(1880-2006)
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8Temperature Anomaly (1880-2009)Base 1951-1980
Aerosols
Aerosols
Aerosols
9Hemispheric Temperature Anomaly (1880-2009)Base
1951-1980
105-year and 11-year Monthly Mean Temperatures for
the Entire Earth and the Northern (N.H.) and
Southern (S.H.) Hemispheres.(Base is 1951-1980)
11Temperature Change from 1850-2009
- Mean surface temperature change for 2001-2007
relative to the 1951-1980 base (top). - Global average temperature 1850-2009 relative to
the baseline period 1880-1920 estimated from
NASA/GISS data set (red) and the Hadley data
(blue). - The final bold point is estimated for 2009.
12Temperature Trend 1983-2008
13Global Temperature Index for 5- and 11-year
Running Mean
14Hottest Years Ranked by the British
Meteorological Office The Current Decade Was the
Hottest
15Variations of the Arctic Oscillation that are
responsible for cold Arctic air reaching lower
latitudes (negative values). The extreme negative
oscillation for Dec. 2009 is shown.
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17IPCC Projected Temperature Rise
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19Temperature, CO2 Concentrations and Carbon
Emissions
20Temperature Increase 1992-2004
- The yellows and reds on these world maps are
positive (warm) anomalies while blues are
negative (cool) anomalies. - The greatest amount of heating has occurred
generally in the Northern Hemisphere and
specifically in the Arctic regions.
21Temperature Anomaly for 2007
22CO2 and Temperature Stabilization
Data from IPCC, 2007Synthesis Report.
23Temperature Anomaly at CO2 Stabilization Relative
to 1800
24Only Human-caused Greenhouse Gas Emissions Can
Account for Global Warming
- The black line is the observed temperature rise.
- The red area is computer simulations of all
emissions, including human. - The blue area is computer simulations of only
natural emissions and the increase in solar
activity.
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26Rise in the Ocean Heat Content
27The Warming Oceans
28Earths Heat Gain During the Past 50 years (1021
Joules)
- Oceans 145 (84)
- Continents 10.4 (6)
- Earths Ice 8.1 (5)
- Atmosphere 6.6 (4)
A joule is a unit of heat energy
29What Global Average Temperatures Become Critical
and Catastrophic for Humans?
- The current best estimate is 2 C above
pre-industrial levels is potentially critical.
About 4 C is potentially catastrophic. The Earth
is now 0.8 C above pre-industrial levels. - When the CO2 abundance reaches 450 ppm the
temperature anomaly will eventually exceed 2 C.
At 650 ppm it will eventually reach a minimum of
4 C. - The current abundance (2010) is 388 ppm and
rising at a rate of 2 ppm/year, and this rate is
increasing. - We have about 30 years to stabilize the
greenhouse gas abundance by cutting emissions
70 (80 for CO2 only). Even at todays
abundance the temperature anomaly will reach the
critical level in about 40 years.
30WHAT IS CRITICAL AND WHAT IS CATASTROPHIC?
- CRITICAL --- serious drop in food production,
serious water shortages, significant sea level
rise, political unrest, major drop in world GDP,
major animal extinctions and millions of human
deaths. Third-world countries, e.g. Africa, are
affected most, including large human migrations. - CATASTROPHIC --- mass extinction event (gt50
species extinction), major sea level rise, mass
starvation, political and economic chaos, 50
human deaths (gt3 billion people). Probably the
end of civilization as we know it today.
31Atmospheric Abundance of CO2 and Global
Temperatures
32Possible CO2 Concentrations and Temperature
Increases
33Possible Temperature Rise
34Projected Temperature Rise for Additional
Greenhouse Gases (GHGs)
35Added CO2 Equivalent for Other GHGs
36Warming or Cooling for CO2, Other GHGs and
Aerosols
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38Past and Future Temperatures