IPCC steps up warning on climate tipping points
in leaked draft report
Scientists increasingly concerned about thresholds
beyond which recovery may become impossible
Fiona
Harvey and agencies
Wed 23 Jun
2021 17.34 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jun/23/climate-change-dangerous-thresholds-un-report
Climate
scientists are increasingly concerned that global heating will trigger tipping points
in Earth’s natural systems, which will lead to widespread and possibly
irrevocable disaster, unless action is taken urgently.
The impacts
are likely to be much closer than most people realise, a a draft report from
the world’s leading climate scientists suggests, and will fundamentally reshape
life in the coming decades even if greenhouse gas emissions are brought under
some control.
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is preparing a landmark report to be
published in stages this summer and next year. Most of the report will not be
published in time for consideration by policymakers at Cop26, the UN climate
talks taking place in November in Glasgow.
A draft of
the IPCC report apparently from early this year was leaked to Agence France-Presse,
which reported on its findings on Thursday. The draft warns of a series of
thresholds beyond which recovery from climate breakdown may become impossible.
It warns: “Life on Earth can recover from a drastic climate shift by evolving
into new species and creating new ecosystems … humans cannot.”
Tipping
points are triggered when temperatures reach a certain level, whereby one
impact rapidly leads to a series of cascading events with vast repercussions.
For instance, as rising temperatures lead to the melting of Arctic permafrost,
the unfreezing soil releases methane, a powerful greenhouse gas that in turn
causes more heating.
Other
tipping points include the melting of polar ice sheets, which once under way
may be almost impossible to reverse even if carbon emissions are rapidly
reduced, and which would raise sea levels catastrophically over many decades,
and the possibility of the Amazon rainforest switching suddenly to savannah,
which scientists have said could come quickly and with relatively small
temperature rises.
Bob Ward,
the policy and communications director at the Grantham Research Institute on
Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics, said:
“Scientists have identified several potential regional and global thresholds or
tipping points in the climate beyond which impacts become unstoppable or
irreversible, or accelerate. They could create huge social and economic
responses, such as population displacements and conflict, and so represent the
largest potential risks of climate change. Tipping points should be the climate
change impacts about which policymakers worry the most, but they are often left
out of assessments by scientists and economists because they are difficult to
quantify.”
Previous
work by the IPCC has been criticised for failing to take account of tipping
points. The new report is set to contain the body’s strongest warnings yet on
the subject.
Simon
Lewis, a professor of global change science at University College London, said:
“Nothing in the IPCC report should be a surprise, as all the information comes
from the scientific literature. But put together, the stark message from the
IPCC is that increasingly severe heatwaves, fires, floods and droughts are
coming our way with dire impacts for many countries. On top of this are some
irreversible changes, often called tipping points, such as where high
temperatures and droughts mean parts of the Amazon rainforest can’t persist.
These tipping points may then link, like toppling dominoes.”
He added:
“The exact timing of tipping points and the links between them is not well
understood by scientists, so they have been under-reported in past IPCC
assessments. The blunter language from the IPCC this time is welcome, as people
need to know what is at stake if society does not take action to immediately
slash carbon emissions.”
Myles
Allen, a professor of geosystem science at the University of Oxford, declined
to comment on the draft report but stressed that avoiding dire impacts was
still possible. “It’s important people don’t get the message ‘we’re doomed
anyway so why bother?’. This is a fixable problem. We could stop global warming
in a generation if we wanted to, which would mean limiting future warming to
not much more than has happened already this century. We also know how. It’s
just a matter of getting on with it,” he said.
According
to AFP, the IPCC draft details at least 12 potential tipping points. “The worst
is yet to come, affecting our children’s and grandchildren’s lives much more than
our own,” the report says.
The
reportmay be subject to minor changes in the coming months as the IPCC shifts
its focus to a key executive summary for policymakers.
It says
that with 1.1C of warming above pre-industrial levels clocked so far, the climate
is already changing. A decade ago, scientists believed that limiting global
warming to 2C above mid-19th-century levels would be enough to safeguard the
future.
That goal
is enshrined in the 2015 Paris agreement, adopted by nearly 200 nations who
vowed to collectively cap warming at “well below” 2C – and 1.5C if possible. On
current trends the world is heading for 3C at best.
Earlier
models predicted that Earth-altering climate change was not likely before 2100.
But the UN draft report says prolonged warming even beyond 1.5C could produce
“progressively serious, centuries-long and, in some cases, irreversible
consequences.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário