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The Heat is On, according to Nature:

 

 

Published online: 11 August 2004; | doi:10.1038/news040809-9

Climate predictions gain surer footing

David Osumi-Sutherland

Range-based model raises global warming estimate by a degree.



 

Climatologists predict an increase in the number of extreme weather events as temperatures rise.

© Punchstock

Researchers who have devised a new approach to calculating global warming say they have reduced our uncertainty about the extent of warming to expect over the next 100 years.

The method, which predicts a temperature rise of at least 2.4°C over the next century, is not dependent on guessing the values of unknown factors. This should put climate modelling on a more solid footing and give policy makers a more rational basis for making decisions about preventing climate change and dealing with its consequences, says study leader James Murphy from the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research in Exeter.

As carbon dioxide levels continue to rise, more heat becomes trapped within our atmosphere, causing the Earth's temperature to increase. But current models of global warming disagree on how sensitive the climate is to carbon dioxide, making it impossible to say exactly how much temperature will rise.
 

 

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The main advantage of this approach is that the range of temperatures it predicts is not dependent on having guessed the unknown components correctly.

Bruce Wielicki, a climatologist at the NASA Langley Research Center likens it to having hundreds of different planets to study climate on. "An attack along these lines is indeed the future key to rigorous uncertainty in climate predictions," he says.

Near certainty?

The results, presented in Nature1, suggest that if carbon dioxide concentrations double over the next hundred years - as many believe they will - the planet will warm by between 2.4 and 5.4°C.

A previous estimate released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), predicted a 1.4 to 5.8°C range.

 


 

The new climate modelling approach takes into account unknowns in the planet's atmosphere.

© NASA

Although it may not seem like much, the one-degree increase at the lower end of the scale is significant, says climatologist Richard Allan from Reading University. It could correspond to a significant rise in sea level and an increase in extreme weather events, both of which will now need to be planned for as a near certainty.

It also effectively dismisses the argument of sceptics who use the current uncertainty to argue for a 'wait and see approach' to reducing carbon dioxide emissions.
 

 

 

 

 

Please note the last paragraph: there is no reason to 'wait and see' what happens. It's happening.

 

August 12, 2004

Last update: 11/13/2007

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