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At Lima Climate Talks, 2-Degree Warming Limit Is a Thing of the Past
12/1/14 at 1:29 PM
We are now officially in arm’s reach of “dangerous” levels of global warming.
United Nations negotiators are meeting this week
in Peru to forge a much-anticipated draft agreement to curb global
climate change. They’re brimming with optimism after the recent climate
agreement between the U.S. and China, which had eluded negotiators for
years.
But amid the hope is a much darker reality: Years of stalled talks and baby steps toward action have all but ensured that we will pass the previous do-not-pass benchmark of 2 degrees Celsius of warming by 2100. Now, The New York Times
reports, the negotiators’ objective is to stave off atmospheric warming
of 4 to 10 degrees by the end of the century, at which point, experts
say, Earth may “become increasingly uninhabitable.”
What does 4 degrees Celsius warming look
like? According to several experts, 4 degrees is enough to melt most or
all of the world’s ice. As climatologist and former NASA Goddard
Institute for Space Studies chief James Hansen put it in a paper published in the journal Nature last year:
“Four degrees of warming would be enough to melt
all the ice.... You would have a tremendously chaotic situation as you
moved away from our current climate towards another one. That’s a
different planet. You wouldn’t recognise it.... We are on the verge of
creating climate chaos if we don’t begin to reduce emissions rapidly.”
Steven Sherwood, a professor at the University of
New South Wales, in Australia, and author of another study looking at
the implications of 4-degree warming, came to a similar conclusion.
“4C would likely be catastrophic rather than simply dangerous,” Sherwood told The Guardian.
“For example, it would make life difficult, if not impossible, in much
of the tropics, and would guarantee the eventual melting of the
Greenland ice sheet and some of the Antarctic ice sheet.”
The volume of water in the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets alone would raise sea levels by 65 meters,
or roughly 213 feet, if released. For comparison, the Statue of Liberty
is 150 feet tall. Coastal regions and island nations would all but
disappear. Long before then, freshwater sources would become inundated
by saltwater.
The U.N. released a report in November that
concluded 2 degrees of warming could be avoided only if global emissions
peak within the next 10 years and then plummet sharply, going down by
half by 2050. A deal of that magnitude is not even on the table. In
fact, the agreement being drafted in Lima this week will not be enacted
until 2020.
Meanwhile, officials at the U.S. National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration report that 2014 will likely be the
warmest year on record. Welcome to a very different type of climate
discussion.
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