
Headlines this week proclaimed the worst-case scenarios for climate change were “debunked” and “not credible”. As you might expect, things aren’t that simple.
The stories were sparked by a study by at the University of Exeter, UK, and his colleagues, who attempted to work out how much warming will result from a given increase in carbon dioxide levels. Specifically, if we doubled CO2 levels in the atmosphere and waited for the temperature to stabilise, how much would the world warm?
This is known as the equilibrium climate sensitivity, and climate scientists have been trying to work it out for decades. Hundreds of studies have produced a wide range of results, which means there is a lot of uncertainty, but the consensus says 1.5 to 4.5°C is most likely.
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Cox’s study narrows this to between 2.2 and 3.4°C. That is excellent news if it is right, but it isn’t a definitive answer. “This study does not set the final boundaries,” says of Duke University, who studies climate sensitivity. Cox agrees. “We don’t know for sure,” he says.
Heated debate
Yet other recent studies say sensitivity is higher. One last month put it between 3 and 4.2°C. Because studies often use different methods, it isn’t obvious why the results vary or which should be given more weight.
While there is uncertainty about the upper range of climate sensitivity, nearly all major recent studies agree that low values can be ruled out. Some climate deniers claim that sensitivity is so low we don’t need to worry about climate change – we are now very sure they are wrong.
In fact, even the high-end estimates are likely to underestimate the eventual rise in global temperatures. That’s because these studies only look at the warming seen a few decades after a doubling of CO2, whereas in reality it would take thousands of years for temperatures to stabilise.
The issue here is that how much the world warms depends on lots of feedback effects. Some are very fast, such as changes in clouds. Others are slow, like changes in vegetation or the melting of the great ice sheets.
By convention, climate scientists only include the rapid feedbacks when calculating equilibrium climate sensitivity. The argument for this is that the response over the next few decades is most relevant to policy. But in the long run there will be more warming – the “true” climate sensitivity could be 6°C or more .
We also need to be cautious about studies that are based on how the climate has behaved over the past century or so, . There could be surprises in store as the world warms further.
And keep in mind, the worst-case scenario is the business-as-usual scenario, in which we continue to pump out C02 as we are today. The consensus is that could warm the world by 4°C by 2100, give or take 1°C. (This is a projection of the actual warming, not the sensitivity, which is a more abstract measure of the climate). If Cox is correct, that estimate is still in the right ballpark.
The good news is that the world isn’t expected to stay on this high-emissions pathway. Even so, CO2 levels are rising faster than ever, so there is no room for complacency. We aren’t doing nearly enough to limit warming to 2°C, even assuming Cox is right.
Nature