Without full decarbonisation by 2030, our global emissions pathway guarantees new era of catastrophic climate change
by Nafeez Ahmed, The Guardian, July 14, 2013
The world is currently on course to exploit all its remaining fossil fuel resources, a prospect that would produce a "different, practically uninhabitable planet" by triggering a "low-end runaway greenhouse effect." This is the conclusion of a new scientific paper by Prof James Hansen, the former head of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and the world's best known climate scientist.
The paper due to be published later this month by Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A (Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A) focuses less on modelling than on empirical data about correlations between temperature, sea level and CO2 going back up to
66 million years.
Given that efforts to exploit available fossil fuels continue to accelerate, the paper's principal finding -- that "conceivable levels of human-made climate forcing could yield the low-end runaway greenhouse effect" based on inducing "out-of-control amplifying feedbacks such as ice sheet disintegration and melting of methane hydrates" -- is deeply worrying.
The paper projects that global average temperatures under such a scenario could eventually reach as high as between 16 and 25 C over a number of centuries. Such temperatures "would eliminate grain production in almost all agricultural regions in the world," "diminish the stratospheric ozone layer" and "make much of the planet uninhabitable by humans."
Hansen and his co-authors find that:
The world is currently on course to exploit all its remaining fossil fuel resources, a prospect that would produce a "different, practically uninhabitable planet" by triggering a "low-end runaway greenhouse effect." This is the conclusion of a new scientific paper by Prof James Hansen, the former head of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and the world's best known climate scientist.
The paper due to be published later this month by Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A (Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A) focuses less on modelling than on empirical data about correlations between temperature, sea level and CO2 going back up to
66 million years.
Given that efforts to exploit available fossil fuels continue to accelerate, the paper's principal finding -- that "conceivable levels of human-made climate forcing could yield the low-end runaway greenhouse effect" based on inducing "out-of-control amplifying feedbacks such as ice sheet disintegration and melting of methane hydrates" -- is deeply worrying.
The paper projects that global average temperatures under such a scenario could eventually reach as high as between 16 and 25 C over a number of centuries. Such temperatures "would eliminate grain production in almost all agricultural regions in the world," "diminish the stratospheric ozone layer" and "make much of the planet uninhabitable by humans."
Hansen and his co-authors find that:
"Estimates of the carbon content of all fossil fuel reservoirs including unconventional fossil fuels such as tar sands, tar shale, and various gas reservoirs that can be tapped with developing technology imply that CO2 conceivably could reach a level as high as 16 times the 1950 atmospheric amount."They calculate that there is "more than enough available fossil fuels" to generate emissions capable of unleashing "amplifying feedbacks" that could trigger a "runaway" greenhouse effect "sustained for centuries." Even if just a third of potentially available fossil fuel resources were exploited, calculations suggest, this scenario would still be guaranteed, meaning decisions we make this century will determine the fate of generations to come.
"Governments are allowing and encouraging fossil fuel companies to go
after every conceivable fuel," said Hansen, "which is an obtuse policy
that ignores the implications for young people, future generations and
nature. We could make substantial parts of the Earth uninhabitable."
The conclusions of Hansen's latest paper are stark:
According to a scientific paper given at the Geological Society of London last month, climate records from Siberian caves show that temperatures of just 1.5 C generate "a tipping point for continuous permafrost to start thawing", according to lead author Prof Anton Vaks from Oxford University's Department of Earth Sciences. Conventional climate models suggest that 1.5 C is just 10-30 years away.
Permafrost thawing releases sub-ice undersea methane into the atmosphere -- a greenhouse gas 20 times more potent that carbon dioxide. In June, NASA's new 5-year programme to study the Arctic carbon cycle, Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (CARVE), declared:
The problem is that our current global emissions trajectory already commits us to a 2 C rise anyway. Papers published by the Royal Society in 2011 showed that emissions pledges would still put the world on track for warming anywhere between 2.5 and 5 C -- and that a failure to deliver these pledges could see global temperatures rise by 7 C by 2100. Amongst them, a Met Office study concluded that strong amplifying feedbacks -- such as the oceans' reduced ability to absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide leading to further warming - could see us reach 4 C as early as 2060.
But as Hansen explained in a recent interview:
This was corroborated last month by the International Energy Agency (IEA), which found that even with current climate policies in place, we are locked into a rise of between 2 and 5.3 C. Two years ago, the IEA concluded that we had 5 years left to implement urgent energy reforms after which we would no longer be able to avoid dangerous climate change. We are now 3 years away from that point-of-no-return.
To make matters worse, the IEA's analysis is based on conventional models which do not fully account for amplifying feedbacks such as methane releases from permafrost thawing. The IPCC's forthcoming Fifth Assessment Report, like its predecessors, will specifically exclude the permafrost carbon feedback from its projections.
The implication is that policymakers are riding blind -- we do not really know how close we are to a tipping point into catastrophe.
There is a solution. According to Hansen, we need to focus on a maximum target of 1 C. "The goal of keeping warming close to 1 C is to keep climate close to the Holocene range, thus avoiding any major amplifying feedbacks," he said.
There is still hope -- the bill is currently up for consideration by the House of Lords. If the bill eventually passes, Britain might still play a leading role in heralding the energy revolution that could help save the planet, while saving the nation up to £100 billion.
Dr Nafeez Ahmed is executive director of the Institute for Policy Research & Development and author of A User's Guide to the Crisis of Civilisation: And How to Save It among other books. Follow him on Twitter @nafeezahmed
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/earth-insight/2013/jul/10/james-hansen-fossil-fuels-runaway-global-warming
The conclusions of Hansen's latest paper are stark:
"Most remaining fossil fuel carbon is in coal and unconventional oil and gas. Thus, it seems, humanity stands at a fork in the road. As conventional oil and gas are depleted, will we move to carbon-free energy and efficiency -- or to unconventional fossil fuels and coal?
... It seems implausible that humanity will not alter its energy course as consequences of burning all fossil fuels become clearer. Yet strong evidence about the dangers of human-made climate change have so far had little effect. Whether governments continue to be so foolhardy as to allow or encourage development of all fossil fuels may determine the fate of humanity."The new paper by James Hansen is just the latest confirming that we are on the verge of crossing a tipping point into catastrophic climate change. Other recent scientific studies show that the current global emissions trajectory could within three years guarantee a 2 C rise in global temperatures, in turn triggering irreversible and dangerous amplifying feedbacks.
According to a scientific paper given at the Geological Society of London last month, climate records from Siberian caves show that temperatures of just 1.5 C generate "a tipping point for continuous permafrost to start thawing", according to lead author Prof Anton Vaks from Oxford University's Department of Earth Sciences. Conventional climate models suggest that 1.5 C is just 10-30 years away.
Permafrost thawing releases sub-ice undersea methane into the atmosphere -- a greenhouse gas 20 times more potent that carbon dioxide. In June, NASA's new 5-year programme to study the Arctic carbon cycle, Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (CARVE), declared:
"If just one percent of the permafrost carbon released over a short time period is methane, it will have the same greenhouse impact as the 99% that is released as carbon dioxide."Another paper suggests that conventional climate modelling is too conservative due to not accounting for complex risks and feedbacks within and between ecosystems. The paper published in Nature last Wednesday finds that models used to justify the 2 C target as a 'safe' limit focus only on temperature rise and fail to account for impacts on the wider climate system such as sea level rise, ocean acidification, and loss of carbon from soils. It concludes that the 2 C target is insufficient to avoid dangerous climate change.
The problem is that our current global emissions trajectory already commits us to a 2 C rise anyway. Papers published by the Royal Society in 2011 showed that emissions pledges would still put the world on track for warming anywhere between 2.5 and 5 C -- and that a failure to deliver these pledges could see global temperatures rise by 7 C by 2100. Amongst them, a Met Office study concluded that strong amplifying feedbacks -- such as the oceans' reduced ability to absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide leading to further warming - could see us reach 4 C as early as 2060.
But as Hansen explained in a recent interview:
"Four degrees of warming would be enough to melt all the ice... you would have a tremendously chaotic situation as you moved away from our current climate towards another one. That's a different planet. You wouldn't recognise it... We are on the verge of creating climate chaos if we don't begin to reduce emissions rapidly."After the last round of climate talks in Doha, a report by Climate Action Tracker concluded that the world is currently on path to see warming of 3 C by 2040, triggering the melting of the Greenland ice sheet and Arctic permafrost.
This was corroborated last month by the International Energy Agency (IEA), which found that even with current climate policies in place, we are locked into a rise of between 2 and 5.3 C. Two years ago, the IEA concluded that we had 5 years left to implement urgent energy reforms after which we would no longer be able to avoid dangerous climate change. We are now 3 years away from that point-of-no-return.
To make matters worse, the IEA's analysis is based on conventional models which do not fully account for amplifying feedbacks such as methane releases from permafrost thawing. The IPCC's forthcoming Fifth Assessment Report, like its predecessors, will specifically exclude the permafrost carbon feedback from its projections.
The implication is that policymakers are riding blind -- we do not really know how close we are to a tipping point into catastrophe.
There is a solution. According to Hansen, we need to focus on a maximum target of 1 C. "The goal of keeping warming close to 1 C is to keep climate close to the Holocene range, thus avoiding any major amplifying feedbacks," he said.
"The 1 C goal requires rapid phase out of fossil fuel emissions, which would require a rising carbon fee. To continue to burn every fuel that can be found is the opposite approach -- they are day and night."Such a rapid fossil fuel phaseout was proposed to the Parliamentary Environment Audit Committee early last year in the form of complete decarbonisation of power by 2030. Unfortunately, the UK bill to that effect was narrowly defeated in the House of Commons last month.
There is still hope -- the bill is currently up for consideration by the House of Lords. If the bill eventually passes, Britain might still play a leading role in heralding the energy revolution that could help save the planet, while saving the nation up to £100 billion.
Dr Nafeez Ahmed is executive director of the Institute for Policy Research & Development and author of A User's Guide to the Crisis of Civilisation: And How to Save It among other books. Follow him on Twitter @nafeezahmed
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/earth-insight/2013/jul/10/james-hansen-fossil-fuels-runaway-global-warming
Hansen has completely lost it.
ReplyDeleteClimate has always changed. The mistake is believing that human activity has any significant influence.
Four papers on the web provide some eye-opening insight on the cause of change to average global temperature and why it has stopped warming. (The latest perceived up tick must be considered in light of historical average global temperature measurement uncertainty, equivalent s.d. approximately +/- 0.1 K arising from the measurement methodology) The papers are straight-forward calculations using readily available data up to May, 2013.
The first paper is 'Global warming made simple' at http://lowaltitudeclouds.blogspot.com/ . It shows, with simple thermal radiation calculations, how a tiny change in the amount of low-altitude clouds could account for half of the average global temperature change in the 20th century, and what could have caused that tiny cloud change. (The other half of the temperature change is from net average natural ocean oscillation which is dominated by the PDO)
The second paper is 'Natural Climate change has been hiding in plain sight' at http://climatechange90.blogspot.com/2013/05/natural-climate-change-has-been.html . This paper presents a simple equation that, using a single external forcing, calculates average global temperatures since they have been accurately measured world wide (about 1895) with an accuracy of 90%, irrespective of whether the influence of CO2 is included or not. The equation uses a proxy which is the time-integral of sunspot numbers. A graph is included which shows the calculated trajectory overlaid on measurements.
Change to the level of atmospheric CO2 had no significant effect on average global temperature.
A third paper, ‘The End of Global Warming’ at http://endofgw.blogspot.com/ expands recent (since 1996) measurements and includes a graph showing the growing separation between the rising CO2 and not-rising average global temperature.
The fourth paper http://consensusmistakes.blogspot.com/ exposes some of the mistakes that have been made by the ‘Consensus’ and the IPCC
The predictive ability of the equation in the second paper can be tested. When calibrated to the data prior to 1995 it predicted the temperature trend in 2012 within 0.04 K.
Dan, I am publishing your comment so that readers can see how stupid deniers are.
ReplyDeleteIf it were all so very simple, then tens of thousands of research studies have been done for nothing.
Which is more probable? Your simple idea is right or thousands of scientists?