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Climate Measurement

Time running out to limit warming to 1.5°C rise, warns Met Office

Dan SymondsBy Dan SymondsMarch 20, 20235 Mins Read
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Aspirations of halving global emissions by 2030 would only deliver a 50:50 chance of keeping the most ambitious pledge of the Paris Agreement alive, according to the UK’s Met Office.

To ensure a greater chance of global temperature rise not exceeding 1.5 °C, global emissions need to peak immediately and reduce by more than half by 2030 compared with 1990 levels.

The Met Office statement coincides with the publication of the IPCC synthesis report, the last in a series known as the Sixth Assessment Report (AR6).

Prof. Jason Lowe, head of climate services at the Met Office, said, “Studies indicate that cutting emissions to half of 1990 levels by 2030 are the scale of what is required for compliance with the aim of 1.5°C. But even this level of cut only yields around a 50% chance of staying at or below the 1.5°C target.

“For greater certainty of staying below the 1.5°C level then even bigger emission reductions become necessary. This further strengthens the case for needing early and rapid emission reductions across the world.”

Professor Helene Hewitt, an IPCC coordinating lead author and Met Office science fellow, said, “Keeping global temperature rise as low as possible is vital to protect the UK’s coasts. Sea levels will continue to rise for centuries, but every incremental rise in temperature increases the risk of flooding of our coastal communities, infrastructure and cherished landscapes.”

The IPCC AR6 synthesis report brings together the findings of the three previous AR6 volumes on the Physical Science, Mitigation and Adaptation published over the last couple of years, as well as three special reports on: Global Warming of 1.5°C; the ocean and cryosphere; and climate change and land.

Dr Chris Jones, Met Office climate science fellow and lead author of IPCC’s AR6 synthesis report, said, “Today’s report reveals the sheer scale of the ambition required to avoid the worst consequences of climate change. We know that climate change is already happening, and the world has already witnessed extreme events associated with the relatively modest warming we have seen so far. In fact, the world now is the coolest it is going to be, at least for many decades.

“The report underscores the need for urgent action – today’s decisions have implications for future generations. Without immediate and equitable mitigation and adaptation, climate change increasingly threatens societies and human well-being. But the report also shows the range of currently available and cost-effective mitigation and adaptation options. Renewed efforts to invest in sustainable development give us the best chance of a climate-resilient future.”

Will the world exceed a 1.5°C rise?
Limiting warming to 1.5°C may involve relying on measures to remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. Potentially, this could cool the Earth back to 1.5°C by the end of the century, after exceeding it in the next few decades. “However, measures to remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere have not been fully tested or deployed at scale,” Lowe said.

Professor Richard Betts, head of climate impacts research at the Met Office and University of Exeter, said, “1.5°C warming doesn’t represent a point where sudden changes will be initiated in the climate system. Staying below it is a target. But the greater the warming, the more severe the impacts of climate change will be.

“If we could manage to lower temperatures after overshooting 1.5°C, this would limit the damage in the longer term. However, overshooting 1.5°C increases the risk of some the world’s icesheets passing a ‘tipping point’ and becoming committed to faster melting, leading to even more rapid sea level rise than staying below 1.5°C.”

Other impacts from overshooting include potentially irreversible tipping points and ecosystem losses.

Dr Camilla Mathison, a Met Office expert on climate mitigation, added, “Proponents of temporarily overshooting 1.5°C need to be aware that the IPCC report includes very few pathways that allow temperature rise to exceed 1.8°C and subsequently return to 1.5°C by 2100. This is because it is not currently considered possible to withdraw the volume of carbon-dioxide needed to achieve that from the atmosphere.”

Risks are increasing with every increment of warming, and the AR6 assessment has found that impacts are more severe and longer lasting than previously assessed.

Jones said, “It is disconcerting there is no guarantee of keeping global temperature rise to 1.5°C without an overshoot. But in the seven years left before 2030 we have to fight for every fraction of a degree. Current policies are not on track to meet already-agreed climate targets. The science within today’s IPCC report provides all the necessary evidence to encourage greater ambition.

“The next round of reports will take several years to publish. By that time – at the current rate of emissions – we are likely to have used up most of the carbon budget for 1.5°C and missed the rapidly narrowing window of opportunity.”

To view the IPCC AR6 synthesis report, click here.

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