Climate change: UN to reveal landmark IPCC report
findings
Published1
hour ago
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-58141129
The world's
largest ever report into climate change will be published later, setting out
the stark reality of the state of the planet.
The study
is by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change - a UN group that looked at
more than 14,000 scientific papers.
It will be
the most up-to-date assessment of how global warming will change the world in
the coming decades.
Scientists
say it will likely be bad news - but with "nuggets of optimism".
And
environmental experts have said it will be a "massive wake-up call"
to governments to cut emissions.
The last
time the IPCC looked at the science of global warming was in 2013 - and
scientists believe they have learnt a lot since then.
In recent
years, the world has seen record-breaking temperatures, raging wildfires and
devastating flooding.
Some papers
studied by the panel show that some of the changes humans are inadvertently
making to the climate will not be reversed for hundreds or maybe thousands of
years.
The IPCC's
findings - which will be revealed at a press conference at 09:00 BST - will
also be used during a major summit hosted by the UK in November.
The summit,
COP26, which is run by the UN, is seen as a critical moment if climate change
is going to be brought under control. Leaders from 196 countries will meet to
try and agree action.
Alok
Sharma, the UK minister who is leading the summit, said at the weekend that the
world was almost running out of time to avoid catastrophe - and the effects of
climate change were already happening.
The
intergovernmental panel brings together representatives of world governments
who appraise research by scientists. That means all governments buy into the
findings.
The last
panel was in 2013 and researchers say much has firmed up since then.
Previously,
for instance, they were reluctant to ascribe extreme events such as heatwaves
and torrential rain to being at least partly down to climate change.
Now in the
case of the heatdome in the US in June, they're confident to say it would have
been almost impossible without climate change.
They say
the world will continue to get hotter.
It will
also - especially in northern Europe - get wetter, though droughts will
increase too as weather patterns shifts.
The panel
studied papers showing that sea level would continue to rise for hundreds or
possibly thousands of years because of heat already trapped in the ocean deep.
Research
does confirm though, that if politicians can stick to holding global
temperature increase down to 1.5C, on pre-industrial times, the worst
catastrophes can still be avoided.
Prof Piers
Forster, an expert in climate change from the University of Leeds, said the
report "will be able to say a whole lot more about the extremes we are
experiencing today and it will be able to be categoric that our emissions of
greenhouse gases are causing them and they are also going to get worse".
"The
report will come with quite a lot of bad news about where we are and where
we're going, but there are going to be nuggets of optimism in there which I
think are really good for the climate change negotiations," he told LBC.
One of the
causes for optimism he mentioned was that there is still a chance of keeping
global warming to below 1.5 degrees.
Experts say
the impacts of climate change are far more severe when the increase is greater
than 1.5C. So far, global temperatures have climbed to 1.2C above
pre-industrial levels.
The Paris
climate agreement in 2015 established the goal of keeping the increase in the
global average temperature to no more than 2C and to try not to surpass 1.5C.
Temperature
curve
Richard
Black, from non-profit advisory group the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit,
said: "Coming just before COP26, this report is a massive wake-up call to
all those governments that have not yet put forward realistic plans to cut
emissions over the next decade.
"It
will show that choices made now have a big effect on our future - leading to a
runaway world of wild weather impacts and incalculable risks at one end, and at
the other a future where climate change is constrained within manageable
bounds."
So, what
can we expect from the report?
According
to many observers, there have been significant improvements in the science in
the last few years.
"Our
models have gotten better, we have a better understanding of the physics and
the chemistry and the biology, and so they're able to simulate and project
future temperature changes and precipitation changes much better than they
were," said Dr Stephen Cornelius from WWF, an observer at IPCC meetings.
"Another
change has been that attribution sciences have increased vastly in the last few
years. We can make greater links between climate change and extreme weather
events."
As well as
updates on temperature projections, there will likely be a strong focus on the
question of humanity's role in creating the climate crisis.
In the last
report in 2013, the IPCC said that humans were the "dominant cause"
of global warming since the 1950s.
The message
in the latest report is expected to be even stronger, with warnings of how soon
global temperatures could rise 1.5C above pre-industrial levels. Experts say
the impacts of climate change are far more severe when the increase is greater
than 1.5C.
It is
expected that this time the IPCC will also outline just how much of an
influence humans are having on the oceans, the atmosphere and other aspects of
our planetary systems.
One of the
most important questions concerns sea-level rise. This has long been a
controversial issue for the IPCC, with their previous projections scorned by
some scientists as far too conservative.
"In
the past they have been so reluctant to give a plausible upper limit on
sea-level rise, and we hope that they finally come around this time," said
Prof Arthur Petersen, from UCL in London.
As the
world has experienced a series of devastating fires and floods in recent months
that have been linked to climate change, the report will also include a new
chapter linking extreme weather events to rising temperatures.
What is the
IPCC?
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is a UN body set up in 1988 to assess
the science around climate change.
The IPCC
provides governments with scientific information they can use to develop
policies on global heating.
The first
of its comprehensive Assessment Reports on climate change was released in 1992.
The sixth in this series will be split into four volumes, the first of which -
covering the physical science behind climate change - will be published on
Monday. Further parts of the review will cover impacts and solutions.
A summary has
been approved in a process involving scientists and representatives of 195
governments.
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