Six Degree Temperature Rise by 2100 is Inevitable: UNEP
U.N.: Expect big jump in temperatures
6-degree increase by 2100 forecast after review of scientific data
The Associated Press, Sept . 24, 2009
WASHINGTON
- Earth's temperature is likely to jump six degrees between now and the
end of the century even if every country cuts greenhouse gas emissions
as proposed, according to a United Nations update.
Scientists
looked at emission plans from 192 nations and calculated what would
happen to global warming. The projections take into account 80 percent
emission cuts from the U.S. and Europe by 2050, which are not sure
things.
The
U.S. figure is based on a bill that passed the House of Representatives
but is running into resistance in the Senate, where debate has been
delayed by health care reform efforts.
Carbon
dioxide, mostly from the burning of fossil fuels such as coal and oil,
is the main cause of global warming, trapping the sun's energy in the
atmosphere. The world's average temperature has already risen 1.4
degrees since the 19th century.
Much
of projected rise in temperature is because of developing nations,
which aren't talking much about cutting their emissions, scientists
said at a United Nations press conference Thursday. China alone adds
nearly 2 degrees to the projections.
"We
are headed toward very serious changes in our planet," said Achim
Steiner, head of the U.N.'s environment program, which issued the
update on Thursday. The review looked at some 400 peer-reviewed papers
on climate over the last three years.
Even
if the developed world cuts its emissions by 80 percent and the
developing world cuts theirs in half by 2050, as some experts propose,
the world is still facing a 3-degree increase by the end of the
century, said Robert Corell, a prominent U.S. climate scientist who
helped oversee the update.
Corell
said the most likely agreement out of the international climate
negotiations in Copenhagen in December still translates into a nearly
5-degree increase in world temperature by the end of the century.
European leaders and the Obama White House have set a goal to limit
warming to just a couple degrees.
The
U.N.'s environment program unveiled the update on peer-reviewed climate
change science to tell diplomats how hot the planet is getting. The
last big report from the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change came out more than two years ago and is based on science
that is at least three to four years old, Steiner said.
Global
warming is speeding up, especially in the Arctic, and that means that
some top-level science projections from 2007 are already out of date
and overly optimistic. Corell, who headed an assessment of warming in
the Arctic, said global warming "is accelerating in ways that we are
not anticipating."
Because
Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets are melting far faster than
thought, it looks like the seas will rise twice as fast as projected
just three years ago, Corell said. He said seas should rise about a
foot every 20 to 25 years.
Other
problems that have worsened since the 2007 report include the oceans
getting more acidic — a threat to some sea creatures — and projections
for regular long-term droughts in the U.S. Southwest.
"As
sobering as this report is, it is not the worst case scenario," said
U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, co-author of the bill that passed the U.S.
House. "That would be if the world does nothing and allows
heat-trapping pollution to continue to spew unchecked into the
atmosphere."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.