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IPCC Fourth Assessment Report - Climate Change is Real and Here!
1. Climate Change 2007:
IPCC Fourth Assessment Report
Climate Change is Real
and Here!
Lučka Kajfež Bogataj
University of Ljubljana
IPCC WG2 vicechair through AR4
2. The 21st Century changes
Four distinctive characteristics:
• They are cumulative
• The effects are irreversible
• Large time lags – today’s actions are
tomorrow’s problems
• They are global
9. The most important spatial pattern of the monthly Palmer
Drought Severity Index (PDSI) for 1900 to 2002.
Drought is increasing most places
10. Regions of disproportionate changes in heavy
(95th) and very heavy (99th) precipitation
Proportion of heavy rainfalls: increasing in most land areas
11. Snow cover and Arctic sea ice are decreasing
Arctic sea ice area decreased
by 2.7% per decade
Summer: -7.4%/decade
15. Human and natural drivers of climate change
• Annual fossil CO2 emissions increased from an
average of 6.4 GtCper year in the 1990s, to 7.2 GtC
per year in 2000-2005
• CO2 radiative forcing increased by 20% from 1995 to
2005, the largest in any decade in at least the last
200 years
----------------------------------------------------------------------
• Changes in solar irradiance since 1750 are
exstimated to have caused a radiative forcing of
+0.12 [+0.06 to +0.30] Wm-2
19. Projections of Future Changes in Climate
Best estimate for
low scenario (B1)
is 1.8°C (likely
range is 1.1°C to
2.9°C),
and
for high scenario
(A1FI) is 4.0°C
(likely range is
2.4°C to 6.4°C).
20. Currently at 430 ppm, rising at 2.5 ppm p.a. and
this rate of increase is increasing
Probabilities (in %) of exceeding a temperature
increase at equilibrium
Source: Hadley Centre: From Murphy et al. 2004
127246999550
49245894100650
922478299100750
00131878450
7°C6°C5°C4°C3°C2°C
Stabilisation level (in
ppm CO2
e)
21. Projected warming
in 21st century
expected to be
greatest over land
and at most high
northern latitudes
and least over the
Southern Ocean
and parts of the
North Atlantic
Ocean
Projections of Future Changes in Climate
23. Observed temperature change during the last 50 years.
Annual Winter Summer
http://eca.knmi.nl/download/)
Modelled change in T from the period 1980-1999 and 2080-2099
for the IPCC-SRES A1B scenario (IPCC, 2007).
25. Projections of Future Changes in Climate
Best estimate for
low scenario (B1)
is 1.8°C (likely
range is 1.1°C to
2.9°C),
and
for high scenario
(A1FI) is 4.0°C
(likely range is
2.4°C to 6.4°C).
26. Climate Change: Faster
than expected in 1990s
IPCC 4 (2007) was limited
to science published by
early 2006
Subsequent research
shows increasing rates
of:
Global GHG emissions
3.3% p.a. in 2000s, vs 1.3%
p.a. in 1990s
Temperature rise
especially in polar regions
Ice melt (Arctic: 40% loss since
1980, accelerating 2006-07)
CO2 Concentration
Av Surface Temp
Sea Level Rise (cm)
Dashed lines =
1990s projections
Rahmstorf, Church, et
al., Science 2007
Solid lines =
observed
1975 1985 1995 2005
27. A global shift southward
European climate in 2080 according to Arpège-Climat in Scenario SRES/A2
28. SUMMARY
• CO2 conc. = unprecedented in the last 650,000 years
• Warming of the climate system = unequivocal
• Most of the global warming of the past half-century
is due to increases in greenhouse gases
• Already committed to more warming (next few
decades), with choices affecting the longer term
more and more.
• Future climate changes include: more extremes,
wetter in high latitudes, drier in subtropics.
29. CONCLUSIONS
• Most of the global warming
of the past half-century is
due to increases in
greenhouse gases
• Climate change is here to
stay
• Humans now control the
mechanisms for global
climate change, for better
or worse