Scientists Say Paris Agreement Climate Goals May Now Be Unattainable

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By Alex Kirby for Climate Newsย Network

The fevered arguments about how the world can reach the Paris climate goals on cutting the greenhouse gases which are driving global heating may be a waste of time. An international team of scientists has learned more about the main greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide (CO2) โˆ’ and itโ€™s not goodย news.

Teams in six countries, using new climate models, say the warming potential of CO2 has been underestimated for years. The new models will be used in revised UN temperature projections next year. If they are accurate,ย the Paris targets of keeping temperature rise below 2ยฐC โˆ’ or preferably 1.5ยฐCย โˆ’ will belong to a fantasyย world.

Vastly more data and computing power has become available since the current Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projections were finalised in 2013. โ€œWe have better models now,โ€ Olivier Boucher, head of theย Institut Pierre Simon Laplace Climate Modelling Centreย in Paris, told the French news agency AFP, and they โ€œrepresent current climate trends moreย accuratelyโ€.

Projections from government-backed teams using the models in the US, UK, France and Canada suggest a much warmer future unless the world acts fast: CO2 concentrations which have till now been expected to produce a world only 3ยฐC warmer than pre-industrial levels would more probably heat the Earthโ€™s surface by four or five degreesย Celsius.

โ€œIf you think the new models give a more realistic picture, then it will, of course, be harder to achieve the Paris targets, whether it is 1.5ยฐC or two degrees Celsius,โ€ย Mark Zelinkaย told AFP. Dr Zelinka, from theย Lawrence Livermore National Laboratoryย in California, is the lead author of the first peer-reviewed assessment of the new generation of models, published earlier this month in the journalย Geophysical Research Letters.

Scientists want to establish how much the Earthโ€™s surface will warm over time if the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere doubles. The resulting temperature increase, known asย Earthโ€™s climate sensitivity, is a key indicator of the probable future climate. The part played in it by clouds isย crucial.

โ€œHow clouds evolve in a warmer climate and whether they will exert a tempering or amplifying effect has long been a major source of uncertainty,โ€ saidย Imperial College London researcher Joeri Rogelj, the lead author for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on the global carbon budget โˆ’ the amount of greenhouse gases that can be emitted without exceeding a given temperature cap. The new models reflect a better understanding of cloud dynamics that reinforce the warming impact of CO2.

For most of the last 10,000 years the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere was a nearly constant 280 parts per million (ppm). But at the start of the 19th century and of the industrial revolution, fuelled by oil, gas and coal, the number of CO2 molecules in the air rose sharply. Today the concentration stands at 412 ppm, a 45 percentย rise โˆ’ half of it in the last threeย decades.

Last year alone, human activity injected more than 41 billion tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere, about five million tonnes everyย hour.

With only one degree Celsius of warming above historic levels so far, the world is already having to cope with increasingly deadly heatwaves, droughts, floods and tropical cyclones made more destructive by risingย seas.

By the late 1970s scientists had settled on a probable climate sensitivity of 3ยฐC (plus-or-minus 1.5ยฐC), corresponding to about 560 ppm of CO2 in the atmosphere. That assessment remained largely unchanged โˆ’ untilย now.

โ€œRight now, there is an enormously heated debate within the climate modelling community,โ€ said Earth system scientistย Johan Rockstrรถm, director of Germanyโ€™s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

โ€œYou have 12 or 13 models showing sensitivity which is no longer 3ยฐC, but rather 5ยฐC or 6ยฐC with a doubling of CO2,โ€ he told AFP. โ€œWhat is particularly worrying is that these are not theย outliers.โ€

Models from France, the US Department of Energy, Britainโ€™s Met Office and Canada show climate sensitivity of 4.9ยฐC, 5.3ยฐC, 5.5ยฐC and 5.6ยฐC respectively, Dr Zelinka said. โ€œYou have to take these models seriously โˆ’ they are highly developed,ย state-of-the-art.โ€

Among the 27 new models examined in his study, these were also among those that best matched climate change over the last 75 years, suggesting a further validation of theirย accuracy.

But other models that will feed into the IPCCโ€™s next major Assessment Report found significantly smaller increases, though almost all were higher than earlier estimates. Scientists will test and challenge the new modelsย rigorously.

โ€œThe jury is still out, but it is worrying,โ€ said Rockstrom. โ€œClimate sensitivity has been in the range of 1.5ยฐC to 4.5ยฐC for more than 30 years. If it is now moving to between 3ยฐC and 7ยฐC, that would be tremendouslyย dangerous.โ€

Image:ย Hafiz Issadeen/Flickr via Climate Visuals, CC-by-2.0

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