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A
crucial global warming "tipping point" for the Earth,
highlighted only last week by the British Government, has already
been passed, with devastating consequences.
Research commissioned by The Independent reveals that the accumulation
of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has now crossed a threshold,
set down by scientists from around the world at a conference in
Britain last year, beyond which really dangerous climate change
is likely to be unstoppable.
Change is likely to be unstoppable
The implication is that
some of global warming’s worst predicted effects, from destruction
of ecosystems to increased hunger and water shortages for billions
of people, cannot now be avoided, whatever we do. It gives considerable
force to the contention by the green guru Professor James Lovelock,
put forward last month in The Independent, that climate change is
now past the point of no return.
The danger point we are
now firmly on course for is a rise in global mean temperatures to
2 degrees above the level before the Industrial Revolution in the
late 18th century.
At the moment, global mean
temperatures have risen to about 0.6 degrees above the pre-industrial
era – and worrying signs of climate change, such as the rapid melting
of the Arctic ice in summer, are already increasingly evident. But
a rise to 2 degrees would be far more serious.
By that point it is likely
that the Greenland ice sheet will already have begun irreversible
melting, threatening the world with a sea-level rise of several
metres. Agricultural yields will have started to fall, not only
in Africa but also in Europe, the US and Russia, putting up to 200
million more people at risk from hunger, and up to 2.8 billion additional
people at risk of water shortages for both drinking and irrigation.
The Government’s conference on Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change,
held at the UK Met Office in Exeter a year ago, highlighted a clear
threshold in the accumulation of greenhouse gases such as carbon
dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere, which should not be surpassed if
the 2 degree point was to be avoided with “relatively high certainty”.
This was for the concentration
of CO2 and other gases such as methane and nitrous oxide, taken
together in their global warming effect, to stay below 400ppm (parts
per million) in CO2 terms – or in the jargon, the “equivalent concentration”
of CO2 should remain below that level.
The warning was highlighted
in the official report of the Exeter conference, published last
week. However, an investigation by The Independent has established
that the CO2 equivalent concentration, largely unnoticed by the
scientific and political communities, has now risen beyond this
threshold.
This number is not a familiar
one even among climate researchers, and is not readily available.
For example, when we put the question to a very senior climate scientist,
he said: “I would think it’s definitely over 400 – probably about
420.” So we asked one of the world’s leading experts on the effects
of greenhouse gases on climate, Professor Keith Shine, head of the
meteorology department at the University of Reading, to calculate
it precisely. Using the latest available figures (for 2004), his
calculations show the equivalent concentration of C02, taking in
the effects of methane and nitrous oxide at 2004 levels, is now
425ppm. This is made up of CO2 itself, at 379ppm; the global warming
effect of the methane in the atmosphere, equivalent to another 40ppm
of CO2; and the effect of nitrous oxide, equivalent to another 6ppm
of CO2.
The tipping point warned
about last week by the Government is already behind us.
“The passing of this threshold
is of the most enormous significance,” said Tom Burke, a former
government adviser on the green issues, now visiting professor at
Imperial College London. “It means we have actually entered a new
era – the era of dangerous climate change. We have passed the point
where we can be confident of staying below the 2 degree rise set
as the threshold for danger. What this tells us is that we have
already reached the point where our children can no longer count
on a safe climate.”
The scientist who chaired
the Exeter conference, Dennis Tirpak, head of the climate change
unit of the OECD in Paris, was even more direct. He said: “This
means we will hit 2 degrees [as a global mean temperature rise].”
Professor Burke added:
“We have very little time to act now. Governments must stop talking
and start spending. We already have the technology to allow us to
meet our growing need for energy while keeping a stable climate.
We must deploy it now. Doing so will cost less than the Iraq war
so we know we can afford it.”
The 400ppm threshold is
based on a paper given at Exeter by Malte Meinhausen of the Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology. Dr Meinhausen reviewed a dozen
studies of the probability of exceeding the 2 degrees threshold
at different CO2 equivalent levels. Taken together they show that
only by remaining above 400 is there a very high chance of not doing
so.
Some scientists have been
reluctant to talk about the overall global warming effect of all
the greenhouses gases taken together, because there is another consideration
– the fact that the “aerosol”, or band of dust in the atmosphere
from industrial pollution, actually reduces the warming.
As Professor Shine stresses,
there is enormous uncertainty about the degree to which this is
happening, so making calculation of the overall warming effect problematic.
However, as James Lovelock points out – and Professor Shine and
other scientists accept – in the event of an industrial downturn,
the aerosol could fall out of the atmosphere in a matter of weeks,
and then the effect of all the greenhouse gases taken together would
suddenly be fully felt.
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Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without
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the included information for research and educational purposes.
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