Scientists: temp limit too high to avoid climate change

A study by 18 eminent scientists has said an internationally agreed target to limit rises in global average temperatures to within two degrees Celsius is around double the threshold that would avoid catastrophic climate change.

Governments decided in 2009 that such temperature increases needed to be no more than two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels to avoid effects such as more extreme weather, higher sea levels and ocean acidification.

UN-Warsaw-COP19-hallReuters Newsagency reports those governments aim to agree by 2015 on a global deal to cut the greenhouse gas emissions blamed for climate change, but the reductions will not come into force until after 2020.

Last month, a United Nations conference in the Polish capital, Warsaw, kept alive hopes for the 2015 deal but nations made little progress on committing to ambitious emission cuts to keep the world on track towards the two degree target.

A study published in United States-based scientific journal PLOS One said the two degree limit was too high and a more appropriate target was around one degree Celsius.

Dr-James-Hansen-Earth-Institute-Columbia-UniversitySome climate extremes are already increasing in response to warming of several tenths of a degree in recent decades; these extremes would likely be much enhanced with warming of two degrees Celsius or more,” the report’s authors said in a statement.

Reuters reports the scientists involved in the study are Dr James Hansen and Dr Jeffrey Sachs of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, Dr Pushker Kharecha of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, and 15 other climate experts from universities and institutes across the world.

“An appropriate target is to keep global temperature within or close to the temperature range in the Holocene, the interglacial period in which civilisation developed,” they said.

The Holocene is the current geological epoch that started around 11,700 years ago and has experienced relatively stable temperatures.

The world cooled slowly in the last half of the Holocene but warming of 0.8 degree Celsius over the past 100 years has brought the global temperature back to near the epoch’s maximum, the study said.

carbon-pollution-dark-skyWarming could be held to around one degree Celsius if emissions from burning fossil fuels were cut by six per cent a year from 2013 and by reforestation, which would result in 500 billion tonnes of cumulative carbon in the atmosphere near the end of the century, the study said.

However, if emissions continued to grow until 2020, they would then have to be reduced by 15 per cent a year to reach 500 billion tonnes.

“The huge fossil fuel energy infrastructure now in place makes it practically certain that the 500 (billion tonnes) limit will be exceeded,” the study said.

The United Nations’ panel of climate experts has said the world needs to stay within a one trillion tonnes “carbon budget” to meet the two degree target.

However, this level would spur slower climate effects such as ice melt and ocean acidification and result in warming of three to four degrees Celsius, the PLOS One study said.

The full study is available at: www.plosone.org/

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