See the Tabbed Pages for links to video tutorials, and a linked list of post titles grouped by topic.

This blog is expressly directed to readers who do not have strong training or backgrounds in science, with the intent of helping them grasp the underpinnings of this important issue. I'm going to present an ongoing series of posts that will develop various aspects of the science of global warming, its causes and possible methods for minimizing its advance and overcoming at least partially its detrimental effects.

Each post will begin with a capsule summary. It will then proceed with captioned sections to amplify and justify the statements and conclusions of the summary. I'll present images and tables where helpful to develop a point, since "a picture is worth a thousand words".

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

IPCC Fifth Assessment Report, Part 3: Mitigation of Climate Change

Summary.  The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued Part 3 of its Fifth Assessment Report, “Climate Change 2014: Mitigation of Climate Change”, on April 13, 2014.  Part 3 reviews recent historical results on the increase in atmospheric greenhouse gases.  It then presents extensive modeling results projecting possible gas levels by 2100 under various emission scenarios.

The scenarios show that global action to reduce emissions to date have been insufficient to achieve a desired goal, that of limiting the world’s average temperature increase to 2ºC (3.6ºF) above the level before the industrial revolution began.  This means that the world will have to invest in mitigation more intensively.  Only certain stringent scenarios suffice to meet this objective; other more lenient ones yield higher greenhouse gas levels that result in a temperature rise higher than the goal.

If we picture the world’s energy economy as a supertanker with high inertial momentum, early intervention by one or two tugs to slow the tanker and steer it to its terminal would have been sufficient.  But now it grows late, and many tugs working at full power will be needed to bring the tanker to its terminal without a collision.


The world has to coalesce around the common objective of reaching agreement on effective mitigation goals and strategies in order to stay within the 2ºC limit.


Introduction

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is established under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).  The IPCC has issued four previous Assessment Reports (ARs) beginning in 1990; they are summarized here.  The last of the three parts of the Fifth Assessment Report (5AR), Part 3, “Climate Change 2014: Mitigation of Climate Change”, was released on April 13, 2014 and is discussed here.  This post is based on its Summary for Policymakers (SPM).  (Part 1 of 5AR, “The Physical Science Basis”, was released on September 30, 2013, reported on here.  Part 2, “Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability”, was released on March 31, 2014, and is described here).

The IPCC Assessment Reports carry great weight among climate scientists and policymakers around the world.  Each part is assembled by a large group of researchers who are specialists in their respective fields, drawn from many UN member states.  The draft reports are subjected to two rounds of scientific review and approval by selected governments before being released (see Details at the end of this post.)  This process assures the most rigorous scientific validity and forms a sound basis for policy development.

Mitigation of Greenhouse Gas Concentration in the Atmosphere

SPM defines mitigation as “a human intervention to reduce the sources or enhance the sinks of greenhouse gases”.  (A source emits GHGs into the atmosphere and a sink removes them from the atmosphere).

Trends in Recent Annual GHG Emission Rates. The cause of short-term  warming of the earth system is the increase in atmospheric concentration of greenhouse gases (GHGs) brought on by human activity associated with the industrial revolution.  This includes largely the burning of fossil fuels that emit the GHG carbon dioxide (CO2), as well as increases in other sources of CO2 and other GHGs as well.  This is shown in the graphic “Historical Trend of Manmade GHG Emissions” (see Details), presenting rates of emission of important GHGs from 1970-2010.  These have increased critically in recent years: average emissions increased by 1.3% per year in the three decades from 1970 to 2000, but became more drastic, 2.2% per year, between 2000 and 2010.  This increase in the annual emission rate is foreseen to continue unabated in the absence of meaningful mitigation measures.

Projected Increases in Annual GHG Emission Rates to 2100.  SPM summarizes climate models that were used to project future emission rates assuming a wide range of final GHG concentrations accumulated by the year 2100.  The worst of these, the “baseline”, assumes no significant mitigation measures will be taken.  The baseline leads to more than 1,000 parts per million CO2 (ppm; volumes of CO2 in 1,000,000 volumes of air) by then.  A graphic showing the projected trends under several emission scenarios is shown as “Projected Emissions Trajectories to 2100” in Details.  The increases shown are due to population growth, and, especially from sharp increases in energy-using economic activity.

Projected Temperature Increases.  The baseline is foreseen to produce a long-term global average temperature increase above pre-industrial times of 3.7 to 4.8ºC (6.7 to 8.6ºF); currently the temperature has increased by about 0.6 to 0.7ºC (1.1 to 1.3ºF).  (The full range of projections from the 5% to the 95% confidence level is much wider, showing the temperature could reach a higher average temperature: 2.5 to 7.8ºC).

The models for the most stringent mitigation measures are intended to keep the long term global average temperature from exceeding 2ºC (3.6ºF) above the pre-industrial level by 2100, corresponding to a GHG concentration of 450 ppm.

Mitigation Measures Are Needed to Keep Temperature Below the 2ºC Goal.  SPM evaluates how successful the various emission scenarios would be in achieving the 2ºC goal by 2100.  This builds on the modeling described above and shown in the graphic “Projected Emissions Trajectories to 2100”.  It concludes with high confidence that worldwide mitigation steps in place or pledged today are insufficient to attain the 2ºC goal, and that delaying further, more stringent mitigation strategies beyond 2030 would make it more difficult to put them in place.  This would also have the effect of reducing the range of mitigation choices available to reach the 2ºC goal.   Failure to keep the emission rate in 2030 below the required level would require “much more rapid scale-up of low-carbon energy over” 2030-2050, and “higher transitional and long term economic impacts”.  Because infrastructure installations underlying the energy economy have long service lifetimes, continuing a “business-as-usual” expansion of GHG-producing facilities “may be difficult or very costly to change, reinforcing the importance of action for ambitious mitigation”.  Compared to emission rates for 2010, successful mitigation pathways are modeled to reduce emissions by 90% between 2040 and 2070, and may even turn negative (i.e., become GHG sinks) by 2100.

Improvements in efficiency of energy infrastructure components as well as changes in human behavior that lead to reduced energy demand are needed to achieve the required reduction in emission rates.  If fossil fuel use were to continue, it would have to be coupled with carbon capture and storage (or sequestration; CCS), which is not yet considered to be a proven available process (please see these two posts).

National and regional mitigation policies already in place have modest results.  Cap-and-trade (market) mechanisms for reducing emissions, according to SPM, have mixed success because of loose caps or caps set too leniently.  Fuel taxes have the long-term result of reducing emission by 0.6 to 0.8% for a 1% increase in purchase price.

International efforts to constrain emissions at the global level are under way.  Negotiations to follow up on the expired Kyoto Protocol are in progress; the intention is to conclude a binding worldwide treaty by 2015 and for it to become effective in 2020.  The Protocol crucially excluded developing countries from coverage, retaining only developed countries under its terms.

Analysis

Global warming is truly a global issue, one that confronts each and every one of us on our planet.  Humanity’s emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels for energy, and of other gases as well, warm the entire earth.  This is a truly global problem, because one nation’s emissions do not affect only its territory; they are dispersed into the atmosphere and contribute to warming the entire planet.

Total accumulated GHG levels in the atmosphere, not annual emission rates, are what determine the extent of increase in the long-term global average temperature.  On the time scale of the next several human generations, CO2, the principal GHG, persists in the atmosphere once emitted (after about 30% is consumed by photosynthesis and by dissolving into the oceans; certain other GHGs are spontaneously lost over shorter times).  For this reason, as long as humanity continues to emit CO2 the world’s average temperature will continue to increase.  Reducing the annual GHG emission rate to near zero only has the effect of minimizing the extent by which the world’s temperature will increase.  A zero emission regime can never return the atmosphere to a lower temperature that prevailed in earlier decades, for the next several human generation times.

Imagine a supertanker loaded with oil (representing the world’s energy economy) leaving port after loading.  Its engines have to work hard to reach cruising speed (representing the world’s expanding energy economy).  When it reaches its port, it has to slow down and navigate to the terminal (representing the need for mitigation).  One or two pilot tugs could meet it far from the terminal and help slow it down, navigating through the twisting channel to the terminal (representing minimal effort expended over a long time to achieve the result).  But if the tugs meet the supertanker only at the last minute, more tugs working at their highest power are needed to slow the ship and guide it to the terminal (representing intense effort applied late to prevent a collision).

A Stitch in Time.  The IPCC has been urging the world to migrate away from use of fossil fuels, and invest in renewable energy, since its first Assessment Report in 1990.  At that time, extreme weather and climate events were not yet prevalent, so reducing greenhouse gas emissions then could well have minimized the need to remedy future damage; the presumed emissions reductions would have kept the world’s temperature increase low enough that extreme weather and climate events would have been less severe.  SPM shows, however, that that opportunity has been largely, but not irretrievably, lost. 

The urgings in successive assessment reports to begin meaningful emission reductions reflect perfectly the meaning of the old saying, “a stitch in time saves nine”.  In other words, early repair of a (tailoring or climatic) defect involving minimal effort avoids the need for later extensive repair of the worsening defect that was left untended.

The prominent climate scientist Thomas F. Stocker concluded in 2013   “…every year counts….  [The longer] the starting time of [a global mitigation program] is delayed, the [more] low [limiting temperature] targets are progressively lost.  The door for these climate targets closes irreversibly.”

SPM is a clarion call for action, sooner, not later.  Internationally, and at the national and personal level, the people of the world have to coalesce around this objective, and work with good will to achieving success.

Details

Significance of IPCC Assessment Reports.  5AR, like its predecessors, is produced by hundreds of experts from around the world, and is subjected to review by other experts and by appropriate governmental bodies before it is approved and accepted for release.  Technical details in Part 3 of 5AR are based primarily on peer-reviewed journal articles and reports produced by renowned nongovernmental organizations or government agencies.  The exhaustive review assures that the released report both represents the current state of scientific and technical expertise, on the one hand, and the points of view of governments of the IPCC, on the other. 

The steps involved in preparing the reports are summarized here , including details for Part 3:

  1. Governments and organizations nominate authors, who are then selected by the organizers of the Working Group (here called a “Part”)
  2. 449 coordinating lead authors, lead authors, contributing authors and review editors from over 58 countries were selected to prepare a first draft of Part 3, considering over 10,000 references to the scientific literature;
  3. The first draft was reviewed by 1,530 other experts who considered 16,188 comments provided by 602 expert reviewers from 58 countries;
  4. 939 individuals prepared a second draft;
  5. The second draft was reviewed by 469 expert reviewers from 53 countries, and by 24 governments, who provided 19,554 comments;
  6. The final draft of the Summary for Policymakers was prepared by representatives of 37 governments, considering 2,573 comments; and
  7. The final draft was approved and accepted by all 195 member nations of the IPCC, and released.

As a result of this thorough drafting and review process, the ARs are rigorously objective.  The reader cannot seriously believe that the ARs offer prejudiced or directed findings or opinions. Indeed, the approval and acceptance process likely leads to consensus positions on unresolved or contentious issues while minimizing the importance granted outlying results or evaluations.

Historical Trend of Manmade GHG Emissions

 
Annual emission rates from 1970 to 2010 of GHGs in gigatonnes (billions of metric tons) per year measured as equivalents to the warming potential of CO2.  ORANGE, CO2 from burning fossil fuels; RUST ORANGE, CO2 from forest loss and land use changes; LIGHT BLUE, methane (CH4); DARK BLUE, nitrous oxide (N2O), which arises from agriculture and other human activities; and BLACK, fluorine-containing carbon compounds frequently used in refrigeration.

LEFT PANEL shows annual emission rates, with numerical amounts and percentage of each category shown every 10 years.  The horizontal bars in the UPPER PORTION of the LEFT PANEL show that emissions increased by 1.3% per year from 1970 to 2000, but became more drastic, 2.2% per year, between 2000 and 2010.

RIGHT VERTICAL BARS give the values for 2010 with “I-beam” error bars shown, for, left to right, the total annual emission, and the emissions for fluorine-containing carbon compounds, nitrous oxide, methane, CO2 from forest loss and CO2 from fossil fuels.


 
Projected Emissions Trajectories to 2100

 
 
Projected annual GHG emission rates.  Historical data are shown to 2010.  Projections proceed from 2010 to 2100.  Annual rates can continue rising or can curve downward, approaching minimal-to-zero emission rates by 2100. 
 
Two principal types of scenario are shown.  The solid black lines labeled with various RCP values show models for given values of excess heating of the earth system due to GHG levels. RCP8.5 (uppermost line) represents continued emissions unconstrained by meaningful mitigation measures, whereas RCP2.6 (lowest line) represents a highly stringent mitigation scenario.
 
The six colored bands show models for given ranges of atmospheric GHG gases (as CO2 equivalents) foreseen by 2100, ranging from more than 1,000 ppm (GRAY band; minimal mitigation measures) at the top to a range of 430-480 ppm (LIGHT BLUE band; stringent mitigation measures) at the bottom.
 
 
© 20
14 Henry Auer

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

IPCC Fifth Assessment Report, Part 2: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability



Summary.  The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued  Part 2 of its Fifth Assessment Report, “Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability”, in March 2014.  Part 2 discusses the need for and implementation of adaptation strategies for coping with the adverse effects of global warming.

Warming causes harms to human populations and natural environments around the globe.  Because of effects such as loss of water resources, lower crop yields, and exposure to extreme weather events, human wellbeing is severely affected. The world needs to adapt to these new climate realities.  Part 2 presents strategies for developing adaptation programs, emphasizing that this process depends importantly on risk management and the repetitive cycling of planning, implementation and assessment.  A major difficulty envisioned is procuring adequate funding for these endeavors. 

Introduction. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is established under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).  Four Assessment Reports (ARs) have been issued previously beginning in 1990; they are summarized here.  Part 2 of the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (5AR), “Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability”, was released on March 31, 2014 and is discussed here.  This post is based on its Summary for Policymakers (SPM) (Part 1 of the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (5AR), “The Physical Science Basis”, was released on September 30, 2013, reported on here.  Part 3, “Mitigation of Climate Change”, is due in April, 2014.)

The IPCC Assessment Reports carry great weight among climate scientists and policymakers around the world.  Each part is assembled by a large group of researchers who are specialists in their respective fields, drawn from many of the UN member states.  The draft reports are subjected to two rounds of scientific review and approval by selected governments before being released (see Details at the end of this post.)  This process assures the most rigorous scientific validity and forms a sound basis for policy development.

Review of the Current Global Status Concerning Adaptation

Adaptation has grown to be an important topic because the world’s climate has already changed, inflicting harm on human populations and degrading the natural environment.  Worldwide impacts have already been felt across terrestrial and oceanic environments.  An extensive summary in SPM of global changes attributed largely to climate change already under way includes

receding mountain glaciers and decline in coral reefs in Africa;
receding mountain glaciers, and earlier leafing and fruit bearing of trees, in Europe;
permafrost degradation and decline in coral reefs in Asia;
shrinkage of mountain glaciers and reduced availability of water from mountain snowpack, and northward shifts of Atlantic fish in North America; and
shrinkage of mountain glaciers and increased Caribbean coral bleaching in Central and South America.

More generally, SPM states that both land species and water and ocean species are shifting their distribution ranges, migration patterns, abundances and ecological interactions in response to climate change.  Worldwide, climate change has caused crop yields to fall, especially for wheat and maize.

Socioeconomic effects of climate change depend importantly on the interplay of their vulnerability and their exposure.  Extreme events such as heat waves, droughts, floods, cyclones and wildfires can lead to altered ecosystems, disrupted food and water supplies, damage to infrastructure, morbidity, mortality, and poor mental health.  SPM states there is “a significant lack of preparedness for current climate variability….”

Adaptation is entering into the consciousness of the public and policymakers.  SPM states “adaptation is becoming embedded in some planning processes, with more limited implementation of responses”.  Both governments and private sector entities are developing adaptation plans and policies, including incorporating adaptation contingencies into broader development plans. Examples of adaptation planning include

disaster risk management;
coastal and water management;
early warning systems;
adapting to sea level rise;
protection of energy and public infrastructure; and
conservation and agricultural product shifts.

Planning future adaptation strategies involves dealing with significant climate uncertainties in a changing background.  Effectiveness of strategies cannot be presently determined because risk management is subject to many interacting factors, long time ranges, and persisting uncertainties.  Repeated cycles of planning, implementing and assessment of adaptive and mitigating strategies are central to this process going forward.

Mitigation of future climate change and adaptation to future harms are closely interacting activities.  Depending on the stringency of worldwide mitigation actions taken, future impacts of warming can vary significantly during the second half of this century.  The severity of these effects in turn impacts how much adaptation will be needed. 

Future Sources of Risk

“Dangerous [manmade] interference with the climate system” (SPM) adversely affects the hazards to and vulnerability of societies and natural systems.  Possible perils include death, injury, ill health or affected livelihoods, degraded coastal regions, pressures on urban populations, loss of infrastructure services, mortality and morbidity from excessive heat, food scarcity and food insecurity, and degradation of marine and terrestrial ecosystems.

The extent of future warming will determine how severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts will be.  Scenarios in which emissions continue at a moderate to high rate risk causing significant future adverse effects such as

on freshwater resources and drought;
terrestrial species extinctions;
submergence and flooding of coastlines;
loss of marine biodiversity and fisheries productivity;
reduced crop yields for wheat, rice and maize in most regions;
lowered economic activity; and
poor human health. 

There is furthermore the risk of population displacements, civil war and inter-regional war, and effects on national security policies due to climate effects on infrastructure.

Adaptive measures should increase resilience to the harms of climate change.  Cross-disciplinary mechanisms for planning and implementation of adaptation measures are needed, at the international, national, regional, and local levels.  Potential problems can arise from constraints including insufficient funding, poor planning, and allocating investments between mitigation and adaptation.

Ideally successful planning will lead to climate-resilience and transformation.  Climate resilience results from combined implementation of adaptation and mitigation measures.  The process will rely on the repeated cycles of assessment and implementation described above, providing effective risk management over time.   Insufficient mitigation measures will result in the inability of adaptation measures to ward off the effects of warming.  The needed transformations include promoting human development (education, housing, etc.), reducing poverty, expanding social safety nets, enhancing ecosystem management, improving infrastructure and technology, implementing effective national policies for adaptation, and political and cultural actions to promote awareness.


Analysis
 

The IPCC Assessment Reports have been warning of the need for mitigation since 1990.  Each of the four earlier assessment reports presented the case for mitigating emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) with successively greater urgency, and with increasing confidence arising from better information and advancing technology.  The resulting enhancements in climate science are reflected in the successive ARs.  This trend continues with 5AR; for example Part 2 considered here cites twice as many publications as its predecessor 7 years ago. 

The urgings in successive assessment reports to begin meaningful reductions in annual rates of emission of greenhouse gases reflect perfectly the meaning of the old saying, “a stitch in time saves nine”.  In other words, early repair of a (tailoring or climatic) defect involving minimal effort avoids the need for later extensive repair of the worsening defect that was left untended.

For example, the prominent climate scientist Thomas F. Stocker concluded in 2013  “…every year counts….  [The longer] the starting time of [a global mitigation program] is delayed, the [more] low [limiting temperature] targets are progressively lost.  The door for these climate targets closes irreversibly.”

As SPM makes clear, early potential mitigation steps not pursued inevitably lead to a need for adaptation to be undertaken, a need that would be far less urgent had mitigation been begun early.

An opportunity for effective global mitigation policy with the Kyoto Protocol (KP) was missed.  KP, setting achievable mitigation goals, was negotiated in 1997 under the UNFCCC; it entered into force in 2005 and expired in 2012.  The treaty crucially excludes developing countries from coverage, retaining only developed countries under its terms.  For this and other reasons the U. S. Senate did not ratify the treaty, so the U. S., the country with the highest GHG emission rate at the time, was not bound by its terms.  Covered nations pledged to reduce their annual emission rates by stated percentages by 2012.  Developing countries and the U. S., on the other hand, were free to continue unconstrained emissions.  During this interval China, now the nation with the highest annual emission rate, and India each increased their emission rates by about 160%, while the rate for the U. S. increased only 30%.

It is clear in hindsight that a critical opportunity for mitigating global GHG emissions was missed.  As a result the reasoned investments in mitigation urged by the IPCC assessment reports, and by Stocker and others, must now be made at a far more intense, and more demanding, rate of expenditure.

Such investments, considered at a global or regional economic scale, largely represent shifting of funds from new fossil fuel development into establishing new infrastructure for renewable energy.  In other words, these investments should be considered to involve funding that had been previously planned.

Adaptation strategies now must find new investment funding from scarce resources.  In contrast to shifting preexisting investment resources for mitigation, funding for adaptation indeed must be found from new, previously unallocated sources.  Consider Hurricane Sandy that struck the New Jersey-New York region in October 2012.  The damage estimate was US$71 billion.  The public ultimately pays this cost in the form of higher insurance premiums and higher taxes, both of which are expenses that previously did not exist and were not planned for.

New York City is responding to the damage caused by the hurricane by undertaking a massive adaptation program to enhance its resilience, valued at US$19.5 billion. An interactive map of cities and states of the U. S. shows their progress toward planning for adaptation. The United Nations estimates that globally adaptation expenditures could be  US$49 billion to US$171 billion a year through 2030.

Adaptation was recognized as an important aspect of the global warming issue at the UNFCCC conference in Cancun in 2010.  The conference established an adaptation fund to assist poorer nations of the world facing harms from global warming.  It was to achieve a contribution amount of US$100 billion/yr by 2020.  Of this, the U. S. was expected to contribute US$20-30 billion/yr. Unfortunately the U. S. has contributed only about US$2.5 billion/yr since 2010.
 

Conclusion

Worsening of planetary warming due to manmade emissions of GHGs is causing  the world to recognize that in addition to mitigation of emissions, adaptation to our changing climate is now needed.  Warming adversely affects human populations and natural ecosystems in ways that negatively impact human wellbeing.  These harms are expected to worsen as warming becomes more pronounced in coming decades.

Adaptation requires the investment of new money not previously allocated for this purpose.  The planning and implementing of adaptation measures explores uncharted paths, since the world has no previous experience in these matters.  Risks arise from uncertainties concerning effects of future warming and undetermined effects that adaptation measures will have.  Risk management therefore will require repeated cycles of planning and implementing adaptation measures, and assessing the efficacy of the resulting projects.  Conclusions drawn from the assessments will then be used to start the cycle over.  Effective adaptations should alleviate the harms from warming that affect human populations and our natural world.
 

Details
 

Significance of IPCC Assessment Reports.  The 5AR, like its predecessors, is produced by a large, ecumenical group of hundreds of experts in their fields, and subjected to review by other experts and by appropriate governmental bodies before it is approved and accepted for release.  Technical details in the ARs are based only on peer-reviewed journal articles and reports produced by renowned nongovernmental organizations or government agencies.  The exhaustive review assures that the released report both represents the current state of scientific and technical expertise, on the one hand, and the points of view of governments of the IPCC, on the other. 

The steps involved in preparing the reports are summarized here, including details for the 30 chapters in Part 2 :

  1. Governments and organizations nominate authors, who are then selected by the organizers of the Working Groups (here called “Parts”)
  2. 745 authors and reviewers from over 100 countries were selected to prepare a first draft of Part 2, considering over 12,000 peer-reviewed scientific articles;
  3. The first draft was reviewed by 1,774 other experts who considered 19,598 comments;
  4. 2,631 expert reviewers prepared a second draft considering 28,544 comments;
  5. The second draft was reviewed by 1,271 experts from 67 countries, and by 33 governments;
  6. The final draft of the Summary for Policymakers was prepared by 241 reviewers from 45 governments, considering 2,350 comments; and
  7. The final draft was approved and accepted by the IPCC, and released.

As a result of this thorough drafting and review process, the ARs are rigorously objective.  The reader cannot seriously believe that the ARs offer prejudiced or directed findings or opinions. Indeed, the approval and acceptance process likely leads to consensus positions on unresolved or contentious issues while minimizing the importance granted outlying results or evaluations.
 
© 2014 Henry Auer