Friday, November 27, 2009

The Copenhagen Diagnosis

While the media gorges itself on the blood sport of the Australian federal coalition leadership challenge, an important new document outlining the seriousness of climate change has been almost completely ignored. The Copenhagen Diagnosis is a summary of the global warming peer reviewed science of the last few years. Produced by a team of 26 scientists led by the University of NSW Climate Research Centre, the Diagnosis shows that the effects of global warming have gotten worse in the last three years. It is a timely update to UN’s Intercontinental Panel on Climate Change 2007 Fourth Assessment document (IPCC AR4) ahead of the Copenhagen conference. (photo credit: m.o.o.f)

While denialists will ignore this as they have all other science gone before it, the diagnosis report (pdf) is sobering reading for anyone concerned about the planet. Researchers found greenhouse gas emissions, global temperatures, ice-cap melting and rising sea levels have all increased since IPCC AR4. Global carbon dioxide emissions have risen by 40 percent in two decades. The global temperature has increased half a degree in the last 25 years. The Greenland and Antarctic ice-sheets are disappearing faster than ever and the sea level has risen 50 millimeters in the last 15 years.

The document unambiguously sheets home the blame on the century long temperature increase on human factors and says the turning point “must come soon”. If we are to limit warming to 2 degrees above pre-industrial values, global emissions must peak by 2020 at the latest and then decline rapidly. The scientists warned that waiting for higher levels of scientific certainty could mean that some tipping points will be crossed before they are recognised. By 2050 we will effectively need to be in a post-carbon economy if we are to avoid unlivable temperatures.

The document puts the lie to the constant refrain of denialists is that temperatures have gone down since 1998. The reality is that the last ten years have been warmer than the previous ten and the long-term trend is unambiguously upward. In 2008 there were two temporary cooling influences, a La Nina (ENSO) and low solar output (the lowest level of the last 50 years). The Copenhagen Diagnosis says these two factors should have resulted in the 2008 temperature being among the coolest in the instrumental era, whereas it turned out to be the ninth warmest on record.

Ten year variations such as sunspots and ENSO are the reason why the IPCC choose 25 year cycles to show trend lines. Nevertheless most NASA measures of the 1990s have shown a warming between 0.17 and 0.34 °C and with an increase of 0.19 °C between 1998 and 2008. The British Hadley Centre’s most recent data had smaller warming trend of 0.11 °C for 1999-2008 but this excluded the Arctic, which has warmed particularly strongly in recent years. The Northwest and Northeast Passages were simultaneously ice-free in 2008 for the first time in living memory and the feat was repeated in the 2009 Northern summer.

The document says climate change will almost certainly cause more extreme weather events. This means more frequent hot days, hot nights and heat waves, fewer cold days and cold nights, more frequent heavy rain, more intense and longer droughts over wider areas, and an increase in intense tropical cyclone activity in the North Atlantic. There is also evidence of more drought, typhoons and bushfires all linked to anthropogenic climate change.

The document is timely as the Australian parliament debates the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme. Whatever the merits of the scheme, its opponents should remember just one in four Australians think climate change fears are exaggerated. The other 75 percent may not agree on what to do but accept their scientists are telling them there is a problem. They look to lawmakers to chart out a future to best ride out the unpleasant shocks to come not to pretend the shocks do not exist.

This is why Copenhagen is happening in a week's time. None of the 198 governments want to be there and none will win from climate change. But all recognise it exists and needs to be dealt at the global level. Other than the powerless Pacific island nations, no country is yet obviously threatened enough to make it a success. The vested interest of each government will ensure less action will occur than is needed. Copenhagen will result in pious platitudes and not much concrete action.

Australia has a small but significant role to play to ensure there isn’t a tragedy of the commons. It consumes less than 2 percent of the world’s resources but that is a significant amount for a country with just 0.003 percent of the world’s people. Labor’s Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme is unlikely to reduce carbon usage by much if at all. Yet its potency as a symbol is undeniable. The CPRS is a referendum on climate change. This is something the Nationals and right-wing Liberals intuitively understand and the Greens do not. The Greens have missed a golden opportunity to be on the side of the symbol (and they can fix it when they gain the balance of power after the next election). In a rare moment of sense among the Liberal horserace shenanigans, Malcolm Turnbull expressed it best yesterday. No political party with any pretensions to govern responsibly can afford to turn their back on climate change.

The exact future of climate may be unknowable but the study of our past is providing overwhelming evidence of trends that simply cannot be ignored. Scepticism is justified only when the facts are unclear or ambiguous and the Copenhagen diagnosis is neither. A simple fact needs to be stated and there is no polite way to say it. Those people who say anthropogenic global warming is a myth are either liars protecting vested interests or mental incompetents. Either way, the only proper course is to ignore them. The stakes are too high.

1 comment:

Jennifer Cluse said...

Thanks for your heads-up on the report, Derek. I had quite missed it.

I don’t come by here often enough.

I am loath to say 'I told you so', but when I saw the 200 year graph of atmospheric CO2 level back in 2000, it was obviously the graph of a runaway positive feedback reaction. Positive feedback becomes greater per unit time as time races by, and I pointed out to all and sundry then that the rate of increase would accelerate, eventually explosively.

I stand by that forecast.

i have no idea whether CO2 is a leader to the obvious temperature abnomalities, or trails them. The cause may well be the Sun's ‘recent’ abnormal behavior. Anyone who implies that they know what is going to happen is either back from the future, or a dreamer. The best we can do is guess, the better educated guesses are likely to be fairly close to our future realities.

However, the idea of actually living within a runaway positive feedback reaction affecting just CO2 levels is enough to frighten me.

I am not a climate scientist, nor a mathematician, only a once well trained radio technician, fairly well versed in the theory and practicalities of feedback reactions.. From that set of data points alone, I stated in 2001 that unless the total world output of CO2 from all sources could be made to equal, or be less than, the ability of the planet to absorb the stuff, by 2015-16, the reaction would continue, and continue to accelerate, until it becomes uncontrollable, unstoppable, and seriously destructive. That’s how all positive feedback loops work, unless a fuse blows first.

The earth has no fuse.

I stand by that estimate.

If CO2 output/absorption balance can be achieved by 2015-16, a long uncomfortable period will follow where the hysteresis of the reaction will ensure that CO2 levels will continue to increase but at a reducing, slowing rate, before topping out somewhere around 450-455ppm, then very, very slowly dropping back. Any side-effects of excessive CO2 levels should also possible diminish.

This assuming that the entire world’s Gordian political body can not only reach consensus but put in place huge societal changes in the 5 to 6 years left to us, and convince the people who they lead that what must be done MUST be done. Now. Not later. Now.

I’m afraid I hold no hope that the deep and profoundly disturbing changes that are required to deal with just the CO2 growth can be affected in time. The majority of the world’s people are reported to accept the science, but we seem oblivious to the ramifications, given the endless accelerating production of the problem materials.

Copenhagen might, should, be the tipping point the world needs - tipping us all into the realization that we are the problem, and we have to ignore our minor concerns and change what matters. Fast.

Recently a Democrat’s candidate, on the promise that I could express my personal opinions on the CO2 situation (not done well), I personally see the only solution out of Copenhagen that could achieve what needs doing in the short time remaining to us to be some the form of world wide martial law, where those in command can force through what needs doing in roughly the time it took us all to fight WW2. Deeply disturbing command decisions are needed, urgently. Democracy does not work in the armed services, and I believe it should be set aside for the next decade, at least until it is established that CO2 levels are coming under control. Then we call possibly revert to stupidity and selfishness.

Thanks for the opportunity to have one last turn on the soap box.

My last turn, because time has run out, and if the bureaucrats, politicians and scientists are unable next week to trigger, indeed force, the massive and awfully disruptive changes through, then I shall comment no further. ‘It’ will be irreversible, whatever form ‘It’ will take.

I pray that I am wrong, and will wear it happily if I am.

Cheers.

(What!
A limit of 4096 characters!
No fair, Derek >grin<)