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The Copenhagen Diagnosis: Updating the World on the Latest Climate Science

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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-28-09 05:30 PM
Original message
The Copenhagen Diagnosis: Updating the World on the Latest Climate Science
Edited on Sat Nov-28-09 05:39 PM by Ghost Dog
The Report is a 64 page .pdf downloadable in high-res and low-res versions from and/or readable online at http://www.copenhagendiagnosis.org/ .

This report covers the range of topics evaluated by Working Group I of the IPCC, namely the Physical Science Basis. This includes:

* an analysis of greenhouse gas emissions and their atmospheric concentrations, as well as the global carbon cycle;

* coverage of the atmosphere, the land-surface, the oceans, and all of the major components of the cryosphere (land-ice, glaciers, ice shelves, sea-ice and permafrost);

* paleoclimate, extreme events, sea level, future projections, abrupt change and tipping points;

* separate boxes devoted to explaining some of the common misconceptions surrounding climate change science.

The report has been purposefully written with a target readership of policy-makers, stakeholders, the media and the broader public.


A "media summary" provided is here: http://www.copenhagendiagnosis.org/press.html and reads:

Global ice-sheets are melting at an increased rate; Arctic sea-ice is disappearing much faster than recently projected, and future sea-level rise is now expected to be much higher than previously forecast, according to a new global scientific synthesis prepared by some of the world’s top climate scientists.

In a special report called ‘The Copenhagen Diagnosis’, the 26 researchers, most of whom are authors of published IPCC reports, conclude that several important aspects of climate change are occurring at the high end or even beyond the expectations of only a few years ago.

The report also notes that global warming continues to track early IPCC projections based on greenhouse gas increases. Without significant mitigation, the report says global mean warming could reach as high as 7 degrees Celsius by 2100.

The Copenhagen Diagnosis, which was a year in the making, documents the key findings in climate change science since the publication of the landmark Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fourth Assessment Report in 2007.

The new evidence to have emerged includes:

* Satellite and direct measurements now demonstrate that both the Greenland and Antarctic ice-sheets are losing mass and contributing to sea level rise at an increasing rate.

* Arctic sea-ice has melted far beyond the expectations of climate models. For example, the area of summer sea-ice melt during 2007-2009 was about 40% greater than the average projection from the 2007 IPCC Fourth Assessment Report.

* Sea level has risen more than 5 centimeters over the past 15 years, about 80% higher than IPCC projections from 2001. Accounting for ice-sheets and glaciers, global sea-level rise may exceed 1 meter by 2100, with a rise of up to 2 meters considered an upper limit by this time. This is much higher than previously projected by the IPCC. Furthermore, beyond 2100, sea level rise of several meters must be expected over the next few centuries.

* In 2008 carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels were ~40% higher than those in 1990. Even if emissions do not grow beyond today’s levels, within just 20 years the world will have used up the allowable emissions to have a reasonable chance of limiting warming to less than 2 degrees Celsius.

The report concludes that global emissions must peak then decline rapidly within the next five to ten years for the world to have a reasonable chance of avoiding the very worst impacts of climate change.

To stabilize climate, global emissions of carbon dioxide and other long-lived greenhouse gases need to reach near-zero well within this century, the report states.

Statements by Authors

"Sea level is rising much faster and Arctic sea ice cover shrinking more rapidly than we previously expected. Unfortunately, the data now show us that we have underesti­mated the climate crisis in the past."
Professor Stefan Rahmstorf, Professor of Physics of the Oceans and a Department Head at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany.

"Carbon dioxide emissions cannot be allowed to continue to rise if humanity intends to limit the risk of unacceptable climate change. The task is urgent and the turning point must come soon. If we are to avoid more than 2 degrees Celsius warming, which many countries have already accepted as a goal, then emissions need to peak before 2020 and then decline rapidly."
Professor Richard Somerville, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, USA.

"We have already almost exceeded the safe level of emissions that would ensure a reasonably secure climate future. Within just a decade global emissions need to be declining rapidly. A binding treaty is needed urgently to ensure unilateral action among the high emitters."
Professor Matthew England, ARC Federation Fellow and joint Director of the Climate Change Research Centre of the University of NSW, Australia.

"This is a final scientific call for the climate negotiators from 192 countries who must embark on the climate protection train in Copenhagen. They need to know the stark truth about global warming and the unprecedented risks involved."
Professor Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, Director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and Chair of the German Advisory Council on Global Change (WBGU).

"The adjustment of glaciers to present climate alone is expected to raise sea level by approximately 18 centimeters. Under warming conditions glaciers may contribute as much as more than half a meter by 2100.”
Dr. Georg Kaser, Glaciologist at the University of Innsbruck, Austria.

“Warming of the oceans and increased uptake of CO2 is of increasing concern for the marine environment. The loss of biodiversity due to upper ocean warming, ocean acidification and ocean de-oxygenation will add dramatically to the existing threads of overfishing and marine pollution".
Professor Martin Visbeck, Professor of Physical Oceanography and Deputy Director of IFM-GEOMAR.

"The climate system does not provide us with a silver bullet. There is no escape but to start reducing greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible."
Professor Nicolas Gruber, Professor for Environmental Physics, ETH Zürich.

"Climate change is coming out even clearer and more rapidly in the recent data. The human contribution is not in doubt."
Professor Corinne Le Quéré, University of East Anglia School of Environmental Sciences, UK

"Climate change is accelerating towards the tipping points for polar ice sheets. That's why we're now projecting future sea level rise in metres rather than centimeters."
Professor Tim Lenton, University of East Anglia School of Environmental Sciences, UK

"Reducing tropical deforestation could prevent up to a fifth of human CO2 emissions, slowing climate change and helping to maintain some of the planet's most important hotspots of biodiversity."
Professor Peter Cox, Climate System Dynamics at the University of Exeter, UK

"New ice-core records confirm the importance of greenhouse gasses for past temperatures on Earth, and show that CO2 levels are higher now than they have ever been during the last 800,000 years. The last time Earth experienced CO2 levels this high was millions of years ago."
Professor Jane Francis, University of Leeds, UK

"The reconstruction of past climate reveals that recent warming in the Arctic and in the Northern Hemisphere is highly inconsistent with natural climate variability over the last 2000 years."
Dr Alan Haywood, Reader in Paleoclimatology, the University of Leeds, UK
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Zoeisright Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-28-09 05:51 PM
Response to Original message
1. We are rapidly reaching the point of no return, if it hasn't been already met.
The planet will survive. Most living creatures will not.

It's too bad - back around 1980 we had a chance of fixing this. But St. Ronnie-the-Stupid was elected and begin systematically dismantling the EPA, alternative energy, etc. etc. etc.
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notesdev Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-28-09 06:53 PM
Response to Original message
2. Quite amazing
how skilled they are at getting people to not only accept but enthusiastically welcome an unaccountable, unelected, undemocratic system of global governance. The question is will this farce be able to continue in the wake of ClimateGate?
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caraher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-28-09 08:03 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. Well, that's the way your hardcore commie works
"Ripper:

You know when fluoridation first began?

Mandrake:

No. No, I don't, Jack. No.

Ripper:

Nineteen hundred and forty six. 1946, Mandrake. How does that coincide with your postwar commie conspiracy, huh? It's incredibly obvious, isn't it? A foreign substance is introduced into our precious bodily fluids without the knowledge of the individual, and certainly without any choice. That's the way your hardcore commie works."

A bit of a non-sequitur, perhaps, but no more so than responding a mountain of evidence with a flip remark about "ClimateGate" and alluding to an imaginary, sinister world government. Though I suppose if we came right down to it, we already do have an "unaccountable, unelected, undemocratic system of global governance" in the form of multinational corporations, the wizards of finance, etc.

Most of whom, it should be noted, are quite content to stoke every lingering doubt concerning the ability of humans to affect climate.
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-29-09 03:40 AM
Response to Reply #2
5. Well, at least you refer to (and decry) "global governance",
Edited on Sun Nov-29-09 03:42 AM by Ghost Dog
rather than "Global Government", perhaps to (unsuccessfully) avoid association with the anti-NWO nutjobs.

You are, presumably, viscerally against the USA being a party to any International Treaties and similar such as, say, the World Trade Organisation, the International Tropical Timber Agreement, the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, the Geneva Convention and so many others?

Extending the "Monroe Doctrine" (and a Straussian, Chicago School version of it, to boot) to cover the whole world, by contrast, appears to be what opposition to the Copenhagen Process is all about.
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jimlup Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-28-09 07:56 PM
Response to Original message
3. Yes, we're in trouble here
A +6C degree warming would seriously change our way of life. I don't agree that we wouldn't survive but life will change dramatically.
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