|
![]() |
||||||||||||
|
DISCUSSIONS
|
February 3, 2005 UK climate meeting calls for actionResearchers discuss 'dangerous' change as global-warming fears grow.by Nicola Jones
"Major investment" is needed to help people mitigate and adapt to global warming. So say the 200 top climate scientists, and a handful of economists and politicians, assembled this week at Britain's Met Office. It is clear that the risks of climate change are more serious than was thought a few years ago, the scientists say. Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change, a meeting organized by the UK government and the Exeter-based Met Office, attempted to assess the current and future state of climate change, and how to avert it.
"We don't really need more detail now," says Michael Mastrandrea from Stanford University, California. "We already have enough information to make an educated guess on how we need to reduce emissions." Researchers agreed that the predictions about climate change made a decade ago are coming true. "Thermal expansion of the oceans, acidification of water, increased air temperature leading to more storms; there is evidence for all this now," says Larry Hughes, an environmental researcher from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada. And it is apparent that things aren't getting better, says Robert Socolow, co-director of the Carbon Mitigation Initiative at Princeton University in New Jersey. "What we can tell politicians is that the list of worries is going to grow." Southern discomfortThe Antarctic is one key area of concern, says Chris Rapley, director of the Cambridge-based British Antarctic Survey. Five years ago, he (and most scientists) were not concerned about Antarctica melting, he says. But recent evidence shows that the Pine Island Glacier is eroding, and might unleash a mass of ice from the western half of the continent. If western Antarctica melts, it will raise sea levels by about 6 metres, Rapley says. "We don't know what will happen. But we know we should be studying it," he says. Others presented worries that were more familiar, but just as real: Greenland may melt; Africa may experience more drought; acidic oceans will imperil coral reefs; and ocean circulation in the Atlantic may shut down, freezing northern Europe.
David King, the UK government's chief scientist, said during the meeting that he had spoken to oil companies about the possibility of pumping carbon dioxide into old oil wells in the North Sea. Making the cutSocolow summarized what could be done. For carbon emissions to remain stable over the next 50 years, he said, we would need to reduce projected emissions in 2054 by 7 billion tonnes of carbon. One billion tonnes of cuts could be achieved by doubling the fuel efficiency of 2 billion cars, or by building 2 million one-megawatt electric windmills, or even by doubling the electricity produced in nuclear power plants. All of these numbers carry a large amount of error. And scientists said that it was hard to work out what the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide would have to be to lead to a 2 °C warming on pre-industrial times. This is the figure that the UK prime minister, Tony Blair, had asked them to provide. "Science cannot come up with a single threshold. That's what politicians are for," says Malte Meinshausen of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. We could, for example, start reductions slowly now, or we could continue to increase emissions for a decade, starting cuts later; we could still end up at the same temperature in 50 years. However, if one delays cuts for ten years, Meinshausen warns, we will need to double the rate at which we reduce emissions later, and that is a very expensive proposition. Article Copyright © 2005 MacMillan Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. |
|||
![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() |
|
|
BioEd Online is funded by grants from Houston Endowment Inc.; Howard Hughes Medical Institute; Science Education Partnership Award program of the National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health (NIH); National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, NIH; National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH; National Space Biomedical Research Institute; National Science Foundation (Divisions of Graduate Education and Research on Learning in Formal and Informal Settings); Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; RGK Foundation; The Powell Foundation; and the Houston Independent School District. © 2004—2010 Baylor College of Medicine. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use and Privacy Policy fruit fly image © 2001 Dennis Kunkel Microscopy, Inc. | ||