'Safe' climate means 'no to coal'
BBCNews.com, April 30, 2009
About
three-quarters of the world's fossil fuel reserves must be left unused
if society is to avoid dangerous climate change, scientists warn.
More than 100 nations support the goal of keeping temperature rise
below 2C.
But the scientists say that without major curbs on fossil fuel use, 2C will probably be reached by 2050.
Writing
in Nature, they say politicians should focus on limiting humanity's
total output of CO2 rather than setting a "safe" level for annual
emissions.
The UN climate process focuses on stabilising annual emissions at a level that would avoid major climate impacts.
But
this group of scientists says that the cumulative total provides a
better measure of the likely temperature rise, and may present an
easier target for policymakers.
"To
avoid dangerous climate change, we will have to limit the total amount
of carbon we inject into the atmosphere, not just the emission rate in
any given year," said Myles Allen from the physics department at Oxford
University.
"Climate
policy needs an exit strategy; as well as reducing carbon emissions
now, we need a plan for phasing out net emissions entirely."
Forty years
The
UN climate convention, agreed at the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, commits
countries to avoiding "dangerous" climate change, without defining what
that is.
The
EU proposed some years ago that restricting the rise to 2C from
pre-industrial times was a reasonable threshold, and it has since been
adopted by many other countries, although some - particularly small
islands - argue that even 2C would result in dangerous impacts.
Temperatures have already risen by about 0.7C during the industrial age.
Dr
Allen's analysis suggests that if humanity's CO2 emissions total more
than about one trillion tonnes of carbon, the 2C threshold is likely to
be breached; and that could come within a lifetime.
"It
took us 250 years to burn the first half trillion," he said, "and on
current projections we'll burn the next half trillion in less than 40
years."
Inherent
uncertainties in the modelling mean the temperature rise from the
trillion tonnes could be between 1.3C and 3.9C, Dr Allen's team
calculates, although the most likely value would be 2C.
Oil change
The
"trillion tonnes" analysis is one of two studies published in Nature by
a pool of researchers that includes the Oxford group and scientists
from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Change Impact Research in
Germany.
The
second study, led by Potsdam's Malte Mainshausen, attempted to work
backwards from the 2C goal, to find out what achieving it might mean in
practice.
It
suggests that the G8 target of halving global emissions by 2050 (from
1990 levels) would leave a significant risk of breaching the 2C figure.
"Only
a fast switch away from fossil fuels will give us a reasonable chance
to avoid considerable warming," said Dr Mainshausen.
"If
we continue burning fossil fuels as we do, we will have exhausted the
carbon budget in merely 20 years, and global warming will go well
beyond 2C."
If
policymakers decided they were happy to accept a 25% chance of
exceeding 2C by 2050, he said, they must also accept that this meant
cutting emissions by more than 50%.
That
would mean only burning about a quarter of the carbon in the world's
known, economically-recoverable fossil fuel reserves. This is likely to
consist mainly of oil and natural gas, leaving coal as a redundant fuel
unless its emissions could be captured and stored.
Both
analyses support the view of the Stern Review and the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in suggesting that making reductions
earlier would be easier and cheaper than delaying.
But
according to Potsdam's Bill Hare, a co-author on the second paper, some
key governments appear to favour pledging milder cuts in the near term
in return for more drastic ones in decades to come.
"We
have a number of countries - the US, Japan, Brazil - saying 'we will
emit higher through to 2020 and then go down faster'," he said.
"That
might be true geophysically, but we cannot find any economic model
where emissions can fall in the range that this work shows would be
necessary - around 6% per year."
Major intervention
Myles
Allen's group has made the argument before that focussing on humanity's
entire carbon dioxide output makes more scientific and political sense
than aiming to define a particular "safe" level of emissions, or to
plot a pathway assigning various ceilings to various years.
Some
greenhouse gases, such as methane, have a definable lifetime in the
atmosphere, meaning that stabilising emissions makes sense; but, said
Dr Allen, CO2 "doesn't behave like that".
"There
are multiple levers acting on its concentration and it does tend to
accumulate; also models have to represent the possibility of some
feedback between rising temperatures and emissions, such as parts of
the land turning from carbon sinks into sources, for example."
The
Nature papers emerge in a week that has seen the inaugural meeting of
President Obama's Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate, a new
version of a body created under President Bush that brings together 17
of the world's highest-emitting countries for discussion and dialogue.
During
the opening segment, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton re-affirmed the
administration's aim of cutting US emissions by 80% from 1990 levels by
2050 - a target espoused by some other developed countries.
But
according to Malte Meinshausen's analysis, even this reduction may not
be enough to keep the average global temperature rise within 2C,
assuming less developed nations made less stringent cuts in order to
aid their development.
"If
the US does 80%, that equates to about 60% globally, and that offers
only a modest chance of meeting the 2C target," he said.
Last week saw the publication of data showing that industrialised countries' collective emissions rose by about 1% during 2007.