Worse
to Come From Global Warming
By Richard A. Kerr
ScienceNOW Daily News
6 April 2007
The U.N.-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
report released today in Brussels has a familiar ring. As the climate
disasters headlined recently--intense hurricanes, drought in the American
West, Arctic thawing--become commonplace in a greenhouse world, plants,
animals, and people will suffer. That has been the presumption, but
the latest report from the IPCC projecting greenhouse impacts calculates
mounting costs that will fall the heaviest on the world's poor.
February's IPCC report on the physical science of climate (ScienceNOW,
2 February) firmly links most of the recent warming of the world to
human activity. Scientists authoring the second report had a tougher
challenge: figuring out the likely consequences. To do that, they considered
29,000 datasets from 75 studies. Of those data series, 89% showed changes--receding
glaciers or earlier blooming, for example--consistent with a response
to warming. Because those responses usually occurred where the warming
has been greatest, the scientists concluded that it's "very unlikely"
the changes were due to natural variability of climate or of the system
involved. "For the first time, we concluded anthropogenic warming
has had an influence on many physical and biological systems,"
says Cynthia Rosenzweig of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies
in New York City, a coordinating lead author on the report.
The IPCC scientists also projected the effects of future warming. Assuming
that nothing's done to slow greenhouse emissions, the February report
predicted a temperature increase of roughly 3°C toward the end of
the century, drying at lower latitudes, more precipitation at higher
latitudes, and rising sea levels. This report finds that such a warming
will bleach most coral reefs by mid-century, drying will begin decreasing
crop yields at lower latitudes within a few decades, and sea level rise
and tropical cyclone intensification will increase the likelihood of
millions of people being flooded out each year on river mega-deltas
such as that of the Ganges-Brahmaputra in southern Asia.
Bottom line? "You don't want to be poor and living on a river delta
or the Florida coast," says climate scientist Stephen Schneider
of Stanford University, a coordinating lead author. The poor--especially
subsistence farmers--tend to be more vulnerable to climate change, notes
the report. And they are least able to adapt, say by building levees
against storms or dams for irrigation. Schneider's other advice: "Try
not to go over 2°C or 3°C because that triggers the really nasty
stuff." With that much warming, the bad effects of this century
only get worse, and the rare benefits, such as higher crop yields in
wetter areas, fade. To avoid that disaster, see next month's IPCC report
on how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Related site
IPCC's Climate Change 2007: Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability