Global heating could stabilize if net zero
emissions achieved, scientists say
Climate disaster could be curtailed within a couple of
decades if net zero emissions are reached, new study shows
Oliver
Milman
@olliemilman
Thu 7 Jan
2021 07.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jan/07/global-heating-stabilize-net-zero-emissions
The world
may be barreling towards climate disaster but rapidly eliminating
planet-heating emissions means global temperatures could stabilize within just
a couple of decades, scientists say.
For many
years it was assumed that further global heating would be locked in for
generations even if emissions were rapidly cut. Climate models run by
scientists on future temperatures were based on a certain carbon dioxide
concentration in the atmosphere. If this remained at the current high level
there would be runaway climate disaster, with temperatures continuing to rise
even if emissions were reduced because of a lag time before greenhouse gases
accumulate in the atmosphere.
But more
recent understanding of the implications of getting to net zero emissions is
giving hope that the warming could be more swiftly curtailed.
More than
100 countries have pledged to get to net zero by 2050, which means they will
emit no more carbon dioxide than is removed from the atmosphere by, for
example, restoring forests. The UK, Japan and the European Union have set this
net zero target and will soon be joined by the US under Joe Biden’s new
administration.
Should this
be achieved globally, “surface temperatures stop warming and warming stabilizes
within a couple decades,” said Michael Mann, a climate scientist at
Pennsylvania State University. “What this really means is that our actions have
a direct and immediate impact on surface warming. It grants us agency, which is
part of why it is so important to communicate this current best scientific
understanding.”
Scientists
have now factored in the dynamism of the Earth’s natural systems, whereby
stopping emissions would actually see atmospheric CO2 content go down due to
the huge carbon absorption capacity of oceans, wetlands and forests. Mann
likens it to filling up a sink with water with the drain partially open – the
water level will still rise due to the incoming water but if you reduce the
water flow it will drop due to the drain remaining open.
“This
falling atmospheric CO2 causes enough cooling to balance out the warming ‘in
the pipeline’ due to slow ocean heat uptake, and global temperatures remain relatively
flat after net-zero emissions are reached,” said Zeke Hausfather, a climate
expert at the Breakthrough Institute. “The main takeaway for me is that this is
good news, because it means that how much warming happens this century and
beyond is up to us.”
The
disastrous present-day trajectory of the world’s climate has been highlighted
by a new paper that shows the world is committed to more than 2C of heating
compared with the pre-industrial period based on current atmospheric
compositions of greenhouse gases. The world has already heated up by 1.1C in
this time and governments have committed to restraining the rise to 1.5C to
avoid punishing heatwaves, flooding, mass displacement of people and other
calamities.
The paper
on “committed warming” appears to spell doom for the goals of the Paris climate
agreement, as well as for millions of people in vulnerable parts of the world,
but the authors point out that cutting emissions would slow the pace of this
temperature rise, potentially spanning centuries.
This would
give civilization time to adapt to the changes or come up with technological
fixes. “At the moment we are changing the temperature a hundred times faster
than what happened in the last ice age,” said Andrew Dessler, a climate
scientist at Texas A&M University and co-author of the paper, published in
Nature Climate Change. “An extra degree in a few hundred years is far less
damaging than a degree in a few decades. The timescale is important.”
Dessler
said he believed there could still be some warming even under net zero
emissions but that the goal of decarbonization was vital. “The problem is still
very severe, we need to reduce emissions as fast as possible and we will deal
with committed warming afterwards,” he said.
Joeri
Rogelj, a climate lecturer at Imperial College London, said he was confident if
the world became net zero in the coming decades it would be possible to remove
further CO2 from the atmosphere to push down on escalating temperatures. But he
added that “bending the global emissions curve on to a global trajectory
towards net zero is really the first and foremost task we have to tackle with
great urgency”.

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