Transcript Document
December 2002
Section 1
Background
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE:
What’s Happening, and What
Can We Expect
What is ‘climate’?
•Climate is ‘average weather’
- and its variability
- for a particular region
- over a period of time
•Includes many different elements
What is ‘climate change’?
•Climate change is a shift in ‘climate’ relative to a
given reference time period
•It is caused by:
Natural factors
-Solar variability
-Volcanic dust levels
-Internal variability
-Geological change
Human factors
- Greenhouse gases
- Aerosols
-Ozone depletion
-Land use change
The earth’s atmosphere consists of multiple
layers
…and provides several important life
supporting services
Suitable, stable
climate
and weather
Protection from solar uv-b
(stratospheric ozone)
stratosphere
surface
troposphere
The air we breath
(21% oxygen)
thunderstorm
The atmosphere’s energy budget is
determined by net heat flow
Outgoing
Heat Energy
Reflected Energy
~31%
Incoming
Solar Energy
Energy Trapped
By Greenhouse Gases
•CO2
0.028%
•CH4
0.0007%
•N2O
0.0003%
Estimating the Magnitude
of the Natural Greenhouse Effect
Net Incoming Solar
Energy
(S0 (1-A) R2)
where
=
Outgoing Heat
Energy
(4R2kTe4)
S0 is the solar constant
A is average albedo, or reflectivity
R is the radius of the earth
k is Boltzmann’s constant
Te is earth’s apparent temperature (seen from space)
Te equals -19C
However, average global surface T is + 14C
Natural greenhouse effect warms the
surface by 33C
Primary Contributors to the
Natural Greenhouse Effect
Carbon
Dioxide
Other
~25%
~10%
~65%
Water
Vapour
Other planets also have Greenhouse Effects,
but these are unsuitable for life
Sun
Venus
Atmosphere:
GH Gases:
Sfc. Temp.:
GH Effect:
mass 90x earth’s
>90% CO2
477C
523C
FAR TOO HOT!
GH Gases:
Earth
Sfc. Temp.:
GH Effect:
~0.04% CO2
~ 1% H2O
15C
33C
NOT BAD!
Mars
Atmosphere:
GH Gases:
Sfc. Temp.:
GH Effect:
mass <1% earth’s
>80% CO2
-47C
10C
FAR TOO COLD!
Latitudinal differences in net energy balance cause
atmosphere and ocean circulation
However, the climate system is also influenced by
many other complex interactions and feedbacks
Denser waters in high latitude oceans
create a thermohaline circulation system
that has a major impact on regional climates
Highlights of historical research into the
natural greenhouse effect
• 1827: Fourier – theorized that greenhouse gases warm the
planet
• 1896: Arrhenius - proposed that changes in atmospheric
CO2 concentrations due to volcanic eruptions can cause climate
change
• 1938: Callendar – first noted that human emissions of CO2
may add significantly to natural concentrations in the
atmosphere
• 1957: Revelle et al. – first warned that human emissions
have started a global scale geophysical experiment and initiated
an atmospheric CO2 concentration monitoring program
An Early Warning About
Climate Change
“Many important economic and social decisions are
being made today on long-term projects…based
on the assumption that past climate data…are a
reliable guide to the future. This is no longer a
good assumption…”
UNEP/WMO/ICSU Conference
Villach, Austria 1985
“Humanity is conducting an
unintended, uncontrolled, globally
pervasive experiment whose ultimate
consequences could be second only to
a global nuclear war.”
World Conference on
The Changing Atmosphere:
Toronto, June 1988
Everyone seems to be talking about
climate change - but confusion reigns!
"Our belief in any particular
natural law cannot have a safer
basis than our unsucessful
attempts to refute it"
Sir Karl Raimund Popper,
philosopher of science
The IPCC is the principal source of sound
advice on climate change science
Cautious
1990
First Report
1992
1995
Second Report
1997
Increasing
Confidence
2001
Third Report
The IPCC process for providing science
advice
• Selection of lead authors
– based on internationally recognized expertise
• Assessment based on published literature
– invited contributions from other experts
• Contents peer reviewed twice
– Second draft also reviewed by governments
• Final contents are responsibility of lead authors
– accepted (not approved) by IPCC
• SPM developed and
approved collaboratively
by IPCC and lead authors
• 2001 WGI report
involved 1078 experts
The IPCC progression in confidence
FAR: "Our judgement is that the size of [global]
warming is broadly consistent with predictions of
climate models but it is also of the same
magnitude as natural climate variability“
SAR: "The balance of evidence suggests a
discernible human influence on global climate.“
TAR: "There is new and stronger evidence that most
of the warming observed over the last 50 years is
attributable to human activities."
Some Contrarian Viewpoints:
“I have never witnessed a more disturbing corruption of the peer-review
process than the events that led to this IPCC report.”
Dr. Fred Sietz, Former president, US NAS
Wall Street Journal 12/6/96
“By failing to convey a balanced presentation of the science presented
in the detailed reports, the SPMS, along with the IPCC press releases,
have become a tool to drive public hysteria.”
Chris De Freitas, U of Auckland climatologist
Bull. Can. Petroleum Geologists, June 2002
“When it to comes to climate change, humans aren't the culprits.”
Dr. Sally Baliunas, Harvard-Smithsonian astrophysicist;
Dr. Tim Patterson, Carleton geologist;
Allan McCrae, PEng
G&M 19/11/02
U.S. NRC Committee advised President Bush
that IPCC reports were well done
It noted that:
• Full IPCC TAR WGI report is “an
admirable summary of research
activities in climate science”
• The full report is adequately
summarized in the Technical
Summary
• The SPM puts stronger emphasis on
concerns, less emphasis on
uncertainties than full report
– all changes were made with consent of
convening lead authors
– most changes had little impact on contents
Joint statement by Academies of Science
from 17 other countries – May 2001
“The work of the…IPCC represents the
consensus of the international science
community on climate change science. We
recognize IPCC as the world’s most reliable
source of information…and endorse its
method of achieving this consensus.”