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Transcript
Remarks on the development of a national climate change research
agenda. March 2003
The federal government is struggling to shape what could become one of the
most important pieces of science policy of the 21st century – its strategy for
climate change research. And already we are seeing the lines being drawn
between scientists and those charged with making policy who must consider
the science that underpins policy development along with the many social
and economic constraints within which government must operate. An
entrenched battle will do no one any good and could lead to a dangerous
stalemate in which no action is taken. With the future of the planet at stake
there can be no winners or losers. There are three essential foci that must
shape the collective deliberations of scientists and policy makers alike as we
develop a national science policy to meet the challenge of global climate
change. Because our concern is to make preparations for what we might
expect the climate to be like in the future we are working in a setting
characterized by uncertainties. The uncertainties do not arise because
scientific understanding of the climate system is inadequate, they arise
because we actually have a well developed understanding of the nature of
the climate system. Global climate can be broadly thought of as chaotic in
nature. Some characteristics of the system are predictable – there will
always be seasons – but many key components are not. predictable at all, or
can be forecast only a small time into the future. That’s just the nature of it
and all the science that we can throw at it won’t change nature itself. Any
statement about the future state of the global climate will contain
uncertainty, and that’s that. Given this scientific fact the first focus of our
climate change research strategy must be to identify the source of the
uncertainties, reduce them if possible while acknowledging that this may not
in fact be possible, quantify them if that can be done, but most importantly
we must develop decision making tools and strategies that allow us to make
rational choices about what should be done in the face of the uncertainties.
That is, after all, what we all do in our daily lives and what governments do
routinely on myriad issues of national policy. The second is the recognize
that climate perturbations that occur on time scales of months to years
associated with such phenomenon as the El Nino produce climate variations
that equal or exceed any we might expect to come from long term climate
change, at least over the present century. We can learn from this. The El
Nino brings devastating floods to some countries and droughts to others but
is one of the climate’s more predictable components. Science has unlocked
that part of the climate genome and predictions of the El Nino can now be
made several months to as much a year in advance with uncertainties of
course but with sufficient confidence that forecasts can be of huge value to
those who have to manage the economic and other consequences of these
climate fluctuations. The federal government through the National Oceans
and Atmospheres Administration sponsored much of the research that lead
to the scientific breakthrough of El Nino prediction and has established the
International Research Institute (IRI) for climate prediction hosted by
Columbia University whose mission is to advance the prediction skill we
have in El Nino forecasting, but as important as advancing the science IRI’s
mission is to develop decision strategies for adaptation to and mitigation of
the most devastating consequences of the El Nino related weather changes.
We are doing this right now and the lessons we are learning can be applied
to understanding how to deal with long-term climate changes. Sadly, the El
Nino’s harshest consequences most often happen in the tropics and arid parts
of the world where most of the world’s poorest people live. Their lives can
be profoundly affected through associated food shortages or even lost
through climate-related natural disasters including disease outbreaks. The
pathway toward development can be deeply impeded if already poor
countries need to constantly wage costly battles against the ravages of
climate. We cannot prevent climate variations but we can warn of their
coming and develop ways to endure them with the least harmful
consequences. So the third focus must be on the worlds poor. Global
climate change will no doubt be distributed quite differently around the
world. There will be winners and losers and one thing of which there is no
uncertainty is that the poorest will be the greatest losers. Even if the climate
change is at the low end of predictions the consequences in poor countries
such as those in sub-Saharan Africa could be tragic. Life for tens of millions
is there already on the edge. People live a marginal existence characterized
by scarcity, hunger and disease. Even minor climate changes that the
developed nations of the world could easily cope with could threaten the
very lives of people in these regions. The climate is global, The richest are
connected to the poorest through the atmosphere and ocean currents and they
will be affected by our actions. There is no uncertainty about that,