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1 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT PART 1 OF 4 10:00:07 Woman This is the story of climate change. 10:00:12 Man But told in a way you’ve never heard before. 10:00:19 Man Because we’re not climate scientists, we’re three mathematicians Man And we’re gonna use the clarity of numbers to cut through the complexity and controversy that surrounds climate change. 10:00:37 Woman Understanding what’s happening to the Earth’s climate is perhaps the biggest scientific endeavour this human race has ever taken on. Man From the masses of data we’ve chosen just three numbers that hold the key to understanding climate change. Woman 0.85 degrees 10:00:59 Man 95% 10:01:02 Man And one trillion tons. 10:01:06 Woman Just by looking at these crucial numbers we’re gonna try and get to the heart of the climate change controversy. 2 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:00:24 Woman They are three numbers that represent what we know about the past, present and future of Earth’s climate. 10:01:18 Woman And it’s not just the numbers themselves that are important, the stories behind them, how they are calculated, are equally intriguing and revealing. 10:00:28 Comm We’ll see how the methods using everything from the Moon landings 10:00:30 Woman To early twentieth century cotton mills and motor racing have fed into the numbers we’ve chosen. 10:00:32 Comm These three numbers tell an extraordinary story about our climate and take us to the limits of what it is possible for science to know. 10:02:05 Opening titles CLIMATE CHANGE BY NUMBERS 10:02:14 10:02:16 MUSIC IN Man Every minute of every day all over the planet scientists are VO collecting data on the climate. Around ten thousand weather stations monitor conditions of the Earth’s surface. Some twelve hundred buoys and four thousand ships record the temperature of the oceans. And more than a dozen satellites continuously observe the Earth’s oceans and atmosphere. 10:02:50 Man All science starts with collecting data and when it comes to VO our climate we’ve got masses of it, but what story about our planet is all that data telling us? 3 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:03:03 10:03:11 MUSIC IN Woman Thousands of scientists are trying to answer that question, VO their results are summarised in a series of huge reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The three numbers we’ve chosen all come from the IPCC’s reports. 10:03:37 Woman Molly. 10:03:39 Hannah I’m Doctor Hannah Fry and I use numbers to reveal patterns in data. I’m looking at one number that answers a critical question, is climate change really happening? MUSIC OUT 10:03:58 Hannah Our first number is PTC Dr Hannah Fry University College London 0.85 degrees. Now this number represents what we know about our climate in the recent past because it’s the number of degrees Celsius that scientists say our Earth has warmed since the 1880s. Hannah 10:04:20 But how can they be so precise? After all our climate is complex and extremely varied. Temperatures change from season to season, place to place and even minute by minute. 10:04:42 PTC As if it wasn’t hard enough to try and find an average temperature of the Earth for now we also need to go back in time and compare it to the average temperature of the Earth in the past when we didn’t have the luxury of modern measurement techniques. 10:04:55 MUSIC IN 4 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:04:59 VO Working out how the planet’s temperature has changed over more than a century is a huge challenge. It’s a bit like trying to work out the route I’m taking across this park, if you only had the route Molly is taking to go on. You have to identify the trend, my path, from all those changing temperatures, Molly’s path and it all starts with the quality of the data. Now that’s not such a problem for the recent past, but what about further back in time? 10:05:42 MUSIC OUT 10:05:45 MUSIC IN 10:05:53 VO Up until the middle of the nineteenth century the temperature record as measured by instruments is patchy and unreliable and there is some controversy about how you reconstruct temperatures before this time. But the record improves from the 1880s due to the efforts of one man. 10:06:27 PTC Now the key man in this story, the man with a plan, is a guy called Matthew Fontaine Maury. Now Maury was a lieutenant in the US Navy and from even when he was a small boy was obsessed with mathematics and data and analysis. But in 1839 Maury had a coaching accident where he broke his thigh bone and dislocated his kneecap and while he was recovering he spent his time studying captains’ log books. And the data that he found there set the path for his next fourteen years’ worth of work, so much so that on the 23rd of August in 1853 he called together a meeting of twelve countries surrounding the North Atlantic, all to talk about one thing. 10:07:08 MUSIC IN 5 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:07:11 VO He wanted to improve the way that data about the oceans was collected. 10:07:19 PTC Captains record all sorts of information in their log books, things like wind speed and direction, or the speed and temperature of the sea currents. Now this wasn’t just interesting to Maury from a scientific perspective, but also because it was something he could sell to commercial ship owners. 10:07:38 VO He found great commercial success from mapping the position of major sea currents like the Gulf stream which enabled ships to use the currents to travel faster. But there was a problem; different sailors took the same measurements in different ways. That was particularly true for one of the measurements climate scientists are interested in, sea surface temperature. 10:08:10 10:08:11 MUSIC OUT PTC Now the way to measure sea surface temperature is actually surprisingly simple, all you do is chuck a bucket over the side of the ship and get the temperature from it. But the problem is that the result that you get actually depends quite a lot on the type of bucket that you use, so let me just take the temperature of this now and in the meantime I’m gonna throw this guy over. 10:08:46 VO In the early nineteenth century some sailors used wooden buckets, others used buckets made of canvas. This meant that the measurements were not consistent. 10:09:01 PTC The wooden bucket’s coming out as a surprisingly warm, er 15.1 and if we make a comparison the canvas bucket, 6 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT unlike the wooden bucket, isn’t insulated so things like, um the air temperature are gonna make a much bigger difference so the temperature has dropped below 15.1 degrees. 10:09:20 VO It may not sound like a lot but even tiny discrepancies undermine the accuracy of the data. 10:09:27 PTC Now Maury knew this and so at his conference in 1853 he came up with a standardised way for everyone across the world to measure sea surface temperature. 10:09:37 10:09:42 MUSIC IN VO He wanted everyone to use wooden buckets and designed special forms for them to fill in with all their data. Maury also introduced standardisation to air temperature measurements on land. That’s why our 0.85 degrees Celsius figure is measured from 1880, it’s the date from which the temperature data is generally well standardised. But despite Maury’s efforts the data was still far from perfect, not everyone stuck to the rules, for example over time canvas buckets made a comeback because they were lighter, so there were still errors, some of which were pretty obvious. 10:10:24 10:10:29 PTC So here is the sea surface temperature data between MUSIC OUT 1880 and 1980. And the first thing that you really notice about this graph is this huge spike that happens where it looks like the sea surface temperature’s raised by 0.8 degrees Celsius. Or at least it looks that way until you realise that this spike happened, er in 1941 when during the 7 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT Second World War understandably sailors didn’t much wanna go up on deck with a torch and a bucket to record 10:10:55 sea surface temperature levels. So instead during that time they used, er the water that was coming in through the engine room which is hence why the data is a lot higher. Now after the Second World War people gradually started returning to using uninsulated canvas buckets, but unfortunately we don’t know who was using them or when. And so in all of this big mess of data how do we get accurate 10:11:19 MUSIC IN temperature readings for land and sea from the past? 10:11:27 VO The answer is related to a mathematical technique that was used to help solve one of history’s greatest challenges. 10:11:41 VO In a mission fraught with difficulties one of the biggest was how to navigate a quarter of a million miles through Space to the surface of the Moon. MUSIC OUT 10:11:53 10:11:57 MUSIC IN VO It’s a feat of navigation all the more astonishing when you consider how difficult finding our way around can be even down here on the ground. MUSIC OUT 10:12:07 PTC Working out exactly where you are on the Earth at any point in time is actually a surprisingly difficult problem, especially if you want really, really precise information. 10:12:18 VO It’s tricky because tracking opposition, just like measuring temperatures over time, is prone to error. 8 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:12:26 PTC Not the easiest thing ever. 10:12:28 VO Take dead reckoning, timing how long you’ve travelled in a particular direction from your last known position. 10:12:35 Man About three miles an hour. 10:12:36 PTC Lovely, three miles an hour, hang on one second. 10:12:43 VO It’s easy to drift off course as inaccuracies build up. 10:12:48 PTC Hang on. 10:12:50 VO Even more high tech methods can get it wrong. 10:12:54 PTC Actually the GPS is putting us over there at the moment which is less than ideal. 10:12:59 VO So when it comes to navigating the problem is which measurement of your position do you trust? 10:13:06 MUSIC IN In the 1950s a young Hungarian born mathematician, Rudolf Kálmán, devised an elegant algorithm to solve this problem. 10:13:17 PTC Kálmán’s method uses a matrix algebra, er and takes into account all of the errors to give you the best possible estimate of your position at any point in time. 10:13:30 VO So how does Kálmán’s method work? In 1969 NASA gave it its ultimate test in the mission to land men on the Video clips Moon. Navigating in Space poses particular challenges. 9 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT The spacecraft was being tracked by four radar stations on Earth. Onboard instruments were also estimating its position, but each of these measurements could be wrong. So how could NASA be sure of Apollo Eleven’s position? This is where Kálmán’s algorithm came in. Moment by moment it compared each position measurement with the others, looking for differences that fell outside the expected margin. If the algorithm had found significant disagreement the mission would have been aborted, but it didn’t and the rest is history. 10:14:59 PTC So this process is now known as Kálmán filtering and has been used in everything from, er cleaning up MUSIC OUT grainy video to looking for trends in economics. And a lot of the underlying principles are exactly the same as you see in the processes used for climate science. So, er knowing when to trust your data and picking out when the errors are big enough to flag up a deeper underlying issue, but the process in climate science is MUSIC IN instead known as homogenisation. 10:15:33 VO Homogenisation has allowed climate scientists today to Video clips clean up data gathered in the past. Unreliable measurements can be corrected or discarded. 10:15:47 PTC So what homogenisation process is doing effectively is taking all of the data from all of the weather stations and comparing it on a day by day basis. Now in doing that if a particular data set starts to look a bit unusual it will really stand out. 10 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:16:05 VO You can see what happens when scientists homogenise a data set by looking at how they corrected the unusual jump in sea surface temperature in the early 1940s. MUSIC OUT 10:16:17 PTC So once you’ve applied this homogenisation process here is what the sea surface temperature data will look like. So we have the original data here, er in yellow and the cleaned up version 10:16:29 MUSIC IN also available in blue. Now the first thing that you notice is that the big jump that we had in 1940 has dramatically reduced, er there is still a bit of a jump because there was an El Niño that year which meant that the sea surface did actually warm. But the jump that was down to the difference in measurements, the, the error in the way that people were measuring, has been taken away completely from the graph. 10:17:00 VO All the big scientific groups that work with climate data use homogenisation methods like this to try and clean up the records of past temperature. 10:17:12 PTC And it’s absolutely vital that you account for some of these errors in measurement that have occurred in historical data otherwise you’ve got no hope of finding any kind of underlying patterns in your data. But inevitably as soon as you start applying these mathematical 10:17:27 MUSIC OUT recipes to clean things up other people will start accusing you of building in biases into your data. 11 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:17:37 VO Perhaps the best defence against bias is scientists’ own scepticism. Many different groups work on climate data using slightly different homogenisation methods and all are subjected to searching scrutiny 10:17:52 MUSIC IN by their peers. But even after homogenising the historical data climate scientists face a further problem, gaps in the temperature record. Even today we do not have temperature measurements for the whole planet. 10:18:14 PTC If you look at where we have temperature data for, if you split the Earth into a grid it becomes very obvious that there are some areas where we have much more information on than others. 10:18:25 VO The black squares show when we had hardly any weather data at all. 10:18:30 PTC So if you take The Arctic for example it’s very obvious there are almost no sample points in The Arctic. 10:18:36 VO The gaps in places like Africa and the Poles can affect how we calculate the average temperature of the whole planet. 10:18:44 10:18:44 MUSIC OUT PTC Now if you take an average across the whole of the Earth and don’t take into account the fact that you have a lot less data for The Arctic you’re gonna end up with a really biased average and something that doesn’t really represent the Earth properly. Now there is actually a mathematical solution to this problem that climate scientists are beginning to use, but it’s one that wasn’t even devised 12 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:19:06 MUSIC IN by a mathematician. 10:19:11 VO The attempt to fill in gaps in the temperature data begins in Video clips the gold fields of South Africa in the 1950s where a mining engineer was grappling with a problem. Danie Krige was in charge of the leases of the country’s very valuable gold fields and was inundated by companies desperate to mine them. 10:19:36 PTC But until each plot of land had been mined he had no way of knowing how valuable each area would be. What he needed was a systematic way of working out how much each lease was worth and so turned to spatial statistics. 10:19:54 VO To understand the challenge Krige faced I’ve come to gold mining country, to Dolaucothi in Wales. All Krige had to go on were a few scattered core samples that had been taken across the gold fields as miners tried to find more gold. He had to find a way of working out much gold there was in each plot of land with just these few measurements, just like climate scientists have to work out the temperature in places where they don’t have measurements. MUSIC OUT 10:20:30 10:20:31 PTC So what I’m gonna do here is show you how Danie Krige’s method worked using these as my core samples. 10:20:39 VO Imagine each of these poles represents a core sample and the number of lights indicates the amount of gold found in it. 10:20:51 PTC So our first core sample is giving us a reading of sixteen parts per million 13 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:20:56 MUSIC IN all the way up there into the red. And this core sample is giving us a reading of only six parts per million. 10:21:14 VO Danie Krige’s samples were often around a kilometre apart. Climate scientists have weather stations that might be hundreds or even thousands of kilometres apart, especially in regions like The Arctic. The problem in each case is the same, how to fill in the gaps in the data. 10:21:35 PTC So one more core sample to do and then I can show you the map. So our last reading is only giving us two parts per million, so we’re still on the gold field but we’re at a much lower grade of gold than we were before. But the real question that Danie Krige wanted to ask was how can you tell what happens in between the core samples, how can you tell how much gold is in the middle? 10:22:05 VO His answer was to use maths to take into account both the amount of gold in each sample and the distances between them. So Krige’s method would take the first exciting strike of gold and look at how far away the neighbouring samples are, as well as how high the levels of gold found in them are. This helps estimate how much the gold levels drop off around each strike. The process is then repeated over the whole field. It may not sound like it, but the maths is relatively simple. 10:22:43 PTC Now it’s so powerful that this method has been used all across the world in everything from looking at gold mines to forestry and even temperature data and it’s even been named after the great man himself, now known as Krigeing 14 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:22:48 MUSIC OUT 10:23:00 MUSIC IN 10:23:02 VO Krigeing is now being used to throw new light on the Video clip biggest recent climate change controversy, what’s happened to the temperature of the planet since the turn of the century? The issue is how you account for gaps in the record of global temperature. 10:23:20 PTC If you take the UK Met Office’s Hadley Centre for example and their data on the changing global temperatures in the recent past they leave blanks in regions where they don’t have any information. But if you look at the temperature set you can see that it demonstrates an effect that’s become known as the Pause which is the temperature of the Earth doesn’t appear to have risen since the year 10:23:42 2000. 10:23:47 VO This Pause in the Earth’s rising temperature is controversial. Some climate change sceptics say it shows that global warming is not real, but most climate scientists say they would expect pauses every now and again within a warming trend. But whether there even is a pause depends on how you account for the gaps in the temperature record. 10:24:13 PTC When this data set was Kriged by an independent scientist in 2014 so that they could take into account the little data that you have in The Arctic he found that the graph changed. 10:24:26 VO Krigeing put more weight on the few temperature points we have from The Arctic and there the temperatures are 15 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT rising fast. The impact of Krigeing on the original incomplete data is to turn the Pause into a small temperature rise. 10:24:43 PTC Now you might think that this doesn’t necessarily represent reality either, but it does demonstrate an important point, what you do with your data has an impact on how you make your conclusions. 10:24:55 VO It’s not to say that Krigeing The Arctic figures has really Video clips shown that there isn’t a Pause, it remains an area of debate, but techniques like this offer scientists the only way they have to overcome the inevitable limitations of incomplete data. It doesn’t matter how much effort scientists go to, temperature data will never be perfect and the trouble is mathematical manipulation of the raw data can look like 10:25:30 fiddling the figures. But the techniques that climate scientists have used are well understood, they’re open to scrutiny and they all lead in the same direction. Three major research groups have contributed to the IPCC’s reconstruction of past temperature. They’ve each used slightly different methods to clean up the historical data and account for gaps in the temperature record. 10:25:57 10:25:57 MUSIC OUT PTC And here are their results. So in the top left hand side you have the results from The Global Historical Climatology Network, er top right you have the results from The Goddard Institute of Space Studies, um and in the bottom left you have the results from The Met Office’s Hadley Centre. Now just these three graphs show pretty similar results, they all seem to be showing a very similar shape, 16 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT especially when you take into account the fact that all of the groups were using different techniques. 10:26:30 MUSIC IN VO From there how did the groups arrive at an average temperature rise? This bit is surprisingly simple. 10:26:39 PTC Now rather than all of the zigging and zagging the groups put a line through each of their graphs and from there it’s very easy to just read off how much the temperature has risen. 10:26:50 VO These three lines show the trend in the average temperature since 1880 for each data set. 10:26:59 PTC But the IPCC then took the average of each of these three lines and come up with the value of 0.85 degrees Celsius, the most accurate measure that we have for how much the Earth’s temperature has risen by since 1880. 10:27:16 VO But that doesn’t mean it’s perfect, the exact figure is always going to be uncertain. Video clips Scientists have done their best to try and compensate for imperfections in the historical temperature record. They’ve applied mathematical record to patchy, unreliable and erroneous data. 10:27:44 10:27:45 MUSIC OUT PTC Now 0.85 degrees is itself just a symbolic figure. I could have averaged the data in several different ways and ended up with a slightly different figure every single time, but that’s not really the point. Looking at how this number is 17 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT produced you can see that it doesn’t matter how you collect your data, how you measure your data, or how you treat it, one point still stands overall, the Earth’s temperature has been 10:28:12 MUSIC IN rising in the last hundred and thirty years. 10:28:20 VO Different groups using different techniques, each Video clips scrutinising the others, have all arrived at pretty much the same conclusion. That’s why it’s now relatively uncontroversial to say that the Earth’s temperature has risen by just under a degree since the 1880s. There’s far less agreement though on the answer to the big question all this raises, why did the Earth’s temperature rise? 10:28:58 10:29:00 MUSIC OUT PTC We can only look at a very different number, a number that answers one of the most difficult and controversial questions in the whole climate change debate. Just to what extent is the rise in temperature caused by human activity and to what extent is it caused by just natural fluctuations? 10:29:16 MUSIC IN 10:29:18 Video clip MUSIC IN 10:29:30 VO I’m Professor Norman Fenton, Woman Hi there, how are you? Norman Hi a mathematician and life long Tottenham Hotspur fan. From financial services to transport and even football I use numbers to work out the most likely causes of different events. 18 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:29:47 PTC Prof Norman Fenton Queen Mary University of London The climate change number I’m looking at is all about cause and effect. 10:29:52 MUSIC OUT The scientists have made a big statement, they say they’re 95% sure of the main cause of the Earth’s recent warming. 10:29:59 10:30:01 MUSIC IN VO And that cause they say is us. All science involves Video clips identifying not just what is happening, but also why it’s happening. When it comes to the climate scientists say they’re 95% sure that over half of the warming in the last sixty years has been caused by humans. How can they be so sure? Well by using statistics we can analyse the most likely cause of something whether that’s success at football or climate change. 10:30:37 PTC I’ve been coming to Spurs for over fifty years and I have to say this isn’t one of their finest seasons, but like most fans I’m pretty confident I know which factors are gonna be most important for determining whether they’re gonna play better or worse than expected MUSIC OUT 10:30:50 in any given season. 10:30:53 VO Unsurprisingly, there’s no shortage of opinions here. 10:30:56 Man Definitely the manager, you know, the manager, they need to respect the manager, the manager needs to have sort of like respect to the players as well. 19 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:31:02 Man If you’ve got the tactics right and you’ve got the players in the right places where they should be. 10:31:07 Man Well you need a very good executive board, your players need to stay very fit, your manager needs to be focused, have a very good philosophy. 10:31:15 10:31:17 MUSIC IN VO Beyond opinion there is a way to use maths to work out Video clip which factors are the most crucial. It’s called an attribution study and it’s what the IPCC did to arrive at their 95% figure. All attribution studies start with identifying the factors that might cause an outcome. Let’s take footballing success. 10:31:43 10:31:44 MUSIC OUT PTC Here I’ve got lots of statistics on all the Premiership teams going back many seasons. It’s interesting when you look at the league tables to see how the performance of a team will vary from season to season. I wanna understand which of many possible factors are the most important causes of this. Is it the length of time the manager’s been with the club? Is it the injury rate? Is it how much they spend on players? I’m gonna put all those factors together with many others and plot my own attribution study. 10:32:12 Video clip MUSIC IN 10:32:21 VO To work out why some teams win and some lose we need the second part of the attribution study. The different factors we’ve identified that could affect the team’s performance are put into a mathematical model. It’s the 20 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT same process climate scientists use to try to work out what is driving climate change. I can now check the accuracy of my model against teams’ past performance. 10:32:48 10:32:50 MUSIC OUT PTC So what I’ve got here for example is I’ve taken one of the teams, Manchester city and I’ve plotted the actual performance in terms of points that they achieved in each of the last few seasons. Now we look at what the model would have predicted and you can see it’s actually a pretty good prediction of what actually happened. 10:33:09 10:33:12 MUSIC IN VO And this is true for all the teams in the Premier League. Now I know I can trust my model I can move on to the clever bit, isolating the factors that make the most difference to the team’s success. 10:33:27 PTC 10:33:29 I found that there was one factor which had MUSIC OUT far greater impact on performance than any other, the wage bill. If I take out the wage bill factor it’s no longer a good estimate at all, it’s quite a long way off and in fact we can repeat that for all of the other teams. 10:33:47 VO Using the same methods as the IPCC I can even put an actual figure on how big an effect the wage bill has. 10:33:59 PTC I can say there’s a 95% chance that if you increase the wage bill by 10% there’ll be at least one extra point at Premiership season. 10:34:09 MUSIC IN 21 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:34:10 VO I can be so confident because the answer’s so clear from my model. But how can climate scientists be equally sure of their results? After all what drives changes in the Earth’s climate is one of the most complex puzzles scientists have ever tried to unlock. Before trying to work out the impact humans have, scientists have to account for natural variations in the Earth’s climate. 10:34:40 PTC 10:34:42 The key science involves a number of factors, MUSIC OUT all of which play a role in changing the climate. If this was a court case 10:34:47 MUSIC IN they’d be our suspects. 10:34:51 VO Many natural factors are known to cause changes to the Video clips climate, they include the sun, the energy it emits varies and this can change the temperature here on Earth. Volcanic eruptions, the vast gas clouds they throw up can cause sharp global cooling as they affect the chemistry of the upper atmosphere and climate cycles like El Niño that can cause global temperature fluctuations lasting many years. But climate scientists say they’re 95% sure that recently all these natural factors have been overshadowed by one other. 10:35:49 10:35:50 PTC For most climate scientists MUSIC OUT there’s one prime suspect in this case, us, and that’s because of a colourless, odourless gas called carbon dioxide that we’re pouring into the atmosphere. One of the first people to try and unravel the role of carbon dioxide on changing the Earth’s temperature was a depressed Swedish 22 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT physicist called Svante Arrhenius. Arrhenius wasn’t interested in the Earth’s warming however, but cooling. 10:36:16 10:36:19 MUSIC IN VO In 1894 Arrhenius’ marriage broke up. Searching for Video clip distraction he set his mind to one of the great mysteries of his time, the origin of the Ice Ages. Scientists had long wondered how the great mountain landscapes of Europe had been formed. Once the rugged valleys were thought to be the relics of a biblical flood, but in Arrhenius’ time it was realised that the Earth had been beset by periodic Ice Ages over the last two and a half million years. 10:07:02 PTC On trips through Northern Europe he studied the vast palatial landscapes that surrounded him and wanted to know how the Earth could possibly have undergone such monumental change. What had caused the planet to cool down so dramatically? 10:37:21 VO Scientific understanding advances by developing theories and then testing them. It was already widely accepted that so called greenhouse gases worked like a huge blanket around the Earth keeping it warm. Arrhenius’ developed a theory that changes in the concentrations of these gases, in particular carbon dioxide, might also have caused the planet to cool. The only way he could test his theory was to use maths to work out the relationship between changing levels of carbon dioxide in the air and the Earth’s temperature. 10:38:06 10:38:07 MUSIC OUT PTC It was painstaking work; every calculation had to be 23 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT written out by hand, Arrhenius himself described it as tedious, but eventually he had his answer. He predicted that a halving of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could lower the temperature by over four degrees and perhaps trigger an Ice Age. Almost as an afterthought he also calculated that a doubling of carbon dioxide could increase the temperature by the same amount. 10:38:36 10:38:42 MUSIC IN VO Eventually it would turn out that changing carbon dioxide levels weren’t the main cause of the Ice Ages, but using maths Arrhenius had established the crucial underlying relationship between carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and the temperature of the planet. 10:39:00 PTC Much of Arrhenius’ efforts and the related work that follows can be summarised in one simple equation, this enables you to calculate the heating effect that comes from raising carbon dioxide above its base level. It’s one of the fundamental building blocks of climate science. 10:39:22 VO The equation shows that the heating effect represented by Delta F rises in proportion to the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Put simply, you can’t raise carbon dioxide levels without heating the atmosphere. But there are many factors that influence the climate, each with their own equations. The rate of energy coming from the sun, the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, human pollution from things such as industry and agriculture, ocean currents, cloud cover, wind speeds, all of which influence each other in a web of complex interactions. Unlike my 10:40:17 football study, modelling the climate is unbelievably 24 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT complicated, so how do climate scientists create a model that accurately represents the complex interactions of all these different factors? The answer comes from the very earliest days of weather forecasting. 10:40:36 MUSIC OUT 10:40:37 Video clips MUSIC IN 10:41:01 VO One of the earliest pioneers of weather forecasting was a man called Lewis Fry Richardson. At the start of the twentieth century he set out to revolutionise weather forecasting using maths. 10:41:21 PTC Our climate is governed by the circulation of the atmosphere and Richardson recognised just how complex this 10:41:26 MUSIC OUT system was, declaring that the atmosphere is like London, there’s more going on than anyone can properly attend to, yet despite this complexity he wanted to find a way to unravel its secrets. 10:41:38 10:41:43 MUSIC IN VO Richardson had an idea of how to do this that was revolutionary. Using the rows of the theatre as his template he thought of dividing the world into grid squares, this would break the problem down into a series of discreet and achievable tasks. He imagined positioning people within each square would only have to solve the calculations relevant to the weather in their area. A director standing at the centre would take in the results of all the calculations to form a forecast. 10:42:32 PTC Richardson made just one attempt to put his ideas into 25 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT practice, 10:42:3 MUSIC OUT retrospectively trying to calculate the weather over Europe for a particular day. But his calculations took him six weeks to complete 10:42:44 MUSIC IN and they were far from accurate. 10:42:48 VO Despite this failure Richardson was ahead of his time. By dividing the world into grid squares he had made the crucial theoretical advance that would not only revolutionise weather forecasting, but also allow scientists to model the climate. All that was needed was enough computing power to put it into action. 10:43:15 PTC Fry Richardson had calculated that he’d need over sixty thousand people using slide rules in order to predict the next day’s weather before it arrived. I’m sure he wished he’d had access to this, the world’s most powerful meteorological super computer, part of the European Weather Centre here in Reading. It may be noisy but it can perform over one thousand trillion calculations every second. 10:43:44 VO The world’s biggest super computers are now used to Video clips model the climate. Just like Richardson they divide the world into a grid and solve the complex equations governing the climate for each square. As computers get more powerful the squares get smaller and the models get better at representing reality. No computer is ever powerful enough to simulate it in as much detail as scientists would like, but this method has allowed scientists 26 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT to build a model for factors that affect the climate, the crucial second step of an attribution study. 10:44:23 PTC 10:44:26 However impressive our super computers are, MUSIC OUT however much the climate models exploit the very limits of our technology, climate modelling remains a simplification which raises the question, how can scientists be confident that their simplified models accurately capture reality? 10:44:44 VO When I made a model for football success I was able to check it against the past results of dozens of teams. Video clips But climate scientists have only one Earth and one set of past data to check their models against, so they’re always looking out for new opportunities to test their models. 10:45:04 MUSIC IN In June 1991 they found a big one. On the Philippine island of Luzon a volcano called Mount Pinatubo erupted. It spewed twenty million tons of sulphur dioxide and ash more than twelve miles up into the atmosphere. It was one of the most devastating eruptions of the twentieth century. But climate scientists at NASA realised it also offered a chance to test their climate model. Could their model predict the effects of the gases given off on the climate? 10:45:53 After adding the eruption into their model it predicted that over the next nineteen months there would be an average global cooling of around half a degree. As the real data came in month by month it matched the model’s predictions. It was good evidence that climate modelling could be reliable. 10:46:18 MUSIC OUT 10:46:20 MUSIC IN 27 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:46:23 VO Unfortunately opportunities to test the models against data are few and far between and as a mathematician I find that frustrating. What’s reassuring is that the underlying physics on which the models are based is robust, so despite Video clip their limitations the models offer a powerful tool to identify the main causes of warming. It’s a process of elimination. 10:46:52 10:46:52 MUSIC OUT PTC To show you what I mean let’s take the example of the sun. If the cycles of the sun were a major cause of the rise in temperature we’ve measured then what we should see would be all the layers of the Earth’s atmosphere warming together like this. 10:47:05 10:47:07 10:47:18 MUSIC IN VO This is called a fingerprint, a characteristic pattern that Video clip would point to the sun’s influence as the cause. PTC What we actually have from the measurements of the past sixty years is that only the lower levels of the atmosphere have warmed while the upper levels have cooled. 10:47:28 VO So what we’re actually seeing in the atmosphere is an Video clip entirely different fingerprint. 10:47:37 10:47:39 MUSIC OUT PTC What the models show is that’s a pattern which only fits well with the main cause of the warming being human activity. 10:47:46 MUSIC IN 28 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:47:47 VO That’s human activity primarily in the form of burning Video clips fossil fuels that release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. And since the 1970s the human fingerprint has become more obvious. From the loss of sea ice in The Arctic, increasing frequency of heat waves to the warming and acidification of the oceans, the models predict all of these patterns only as a result of increasing greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide. 10:48:26 MUSIC OUT 10:48:27 MUSIC IN The evidence that human activity is the major cause of recent warming is compelling. But the models can go one step further and help us put a figure on the level of certainty behind this statement. 10:48:46 PTC The yellow line on this graph is the real world data. This is how much warming we’ve measured across the world since 1951, 0.6 degrees. 10:48:58 VO Firstly in red let’s look at how the climate models expected Video clips the global temperatures to change when taking into account all known factors. The shading shows the amount of fluctuation around the average that they would expect to happen. The most obvious features are a general rise, the result of the increasing carbon dioxide levels with some sharp dips caused by big volcanic eruptions. 10:49:33 PTC But look what happens if we run our models without any human influences like greenhouse gases, so now only natural forces are included in our model data. The line doesn’t match the real data well at all. This is what the model suggests our climate would be like if there was no 29 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT human impact on it at all. 10:49:56 VO The models say that without any human influence global Video clip temperature would not have risen significantly over the past sixty years. It’s as clear as taking the wage bill out of my football prediction. The models also help scientists put a figure on how certain they are of human impact on the climate. 10:50:17 10:50:18 MUSIC OUT PTC From the models they found there was a greater than 99% probability that more than half of the warming was due to human activity. 10:50:26 Video clip MUSIC IN 10:50:27 VO Given that high level of certainty how did the IPCC arrive at its slightly lower 95% certainty figure? All of us who work with mathematical models know that they’re simplifications, so we have to take into account their limitations. That’s why the IPCC downgraded its final conclusion from 99% to greater than 95% sure that humans have caused more than half the recent warming. 10:51:00 MUSIC OUT 10:51:01 MUSIC IN All science proceeds by producing theories and then testing them, but when it comes to our climate it’s impossible to test the influence of different factors on the planet. That’s why scientists have turned to maths to help model the climate. It’s not perfect, but it is the only way to put a figure on how sure we are the Earth’s warming is down to human activity. 10:51:30 MUSIC OUT 30 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:51:32 Video clip 10:51:34 PTC Years of scientific research and statistical analysis have brought us as far as 95% and that’s close enough for most people to believe it. That just leaves the question, what’s gonna happen with our climate in the future? 10:51:48 10:51:54 MUSIC IN VO I’m Professor David Spiegelhalter and I use numbers to try to help organisations like the Health Service predict the future. I’m looking at one number that aims to give us a clear guide to how our actions now might affect the climate. 10:52:15 PTC The number I’m looking at Prof. David Spiegelhalter University of Cambridge is one trillion, this rather unimaginably big number may be crucial to the future of our planet. It’s the best estimate that climate scientists have made of the number of tons of carbon that we could 10:52:30 MUIC OUT burn before we MUSIC IN run the risk of causing what’s been called dangerous 10:52:32 climate change. 10:52:37 VO That’s defined as an average warming across the globe of Video clips more than two degrees Celsius. All fossil fuels contain carbon, when we burn them it converts this carbon into the carbon dioxide that warms the atmosphere, so the trillion 31 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT tons figure puts a limit on the amount of fossil fuels we can burn. 10:53:01 PTC In effect this gives the world a budget, it says that if we want to avoid a two degrees rise then we can’t afford to spend, or burn, more than a trillion tons of carbon and that’s a total going right back to the beginning of industrialisation. 10:53:15 MUSIC OUT 10:53:16 Video clips 10:53:22 VO A trillion tons sounds like a lot, but the trouble is we’ve already burnt around half a trillion tons and that’s given us almost a degree of warming and if we carry on the way we’re going we’ll burn the other half a trillion tons in about thirty years. The implications are profound. 10:53:41 MUSIC IN 10:53:45 We’ve already identified several trillion tons of fossil fuel reserves buried inside the Earth, so to keep warming below two degrees will probably mean leaving most of those reserves in the ground. Before we take such drastic action I’d like to know a bit more about the trillion tons figure. Where does this number come from? 10:54:12 PTC 10:54:20 10:54:20 And how much confidence should we have in it? MUSIC OUT VO The one trillion ton limit is based on being able to predict the future. That may make it sound unscientific, but for centuries people have been working on ways to make predictions using statistics. 10:54:35 PTC The history of statistics and prediction has been driven by 32 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT incentives, in fact the first people who worked on probability and statistics were either advising gamblers or pricing up pensions. So I think if you really want to know who’s making good predictions look at people who are putting their money 10:54:52 MUSIC IN where their mouth is. 10:54:58 Video clip 10:55:04 PTC And there’s a lot of money in motor racing. 10:55:10 VO And a lot of effort to try to predict the future because Video clips winning isn’t just about driving fast, it’s also about making the right decisions, what to do as the race unfolds, the weather changes and the unexpected happens. And this is where prediction and statistics comes in. There are far too many variables for the decision to be left to the driver, or sometimes even to the people at the race track, it needs a dedicated race strategist. 10:55:50 PTC In the 2005 Monaco Grand Prix Kimi Räikkönen was in Video clip the lead after twenty five laps when there was a six car pile up. The safety car came out and the team had to decide very quickly should Räikkönen come into the pits or should they leave him out there until the race restarted and this would decide whether he won or not. They didn’t know what to do and then a two word email came in from the chief strategist who was in England and the email said stay out. 10:56:21 PTC So Räikkönen stayed out and the people who came into the pits got all jammed up so Räikkönen went on to win the race and all because of the power of prediction. 10:56:33 Video clip 10:56:35 Video clip So how did Räikkönen’s strategist predict the outcome of 33 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:56:41 VO different strategies? PTC They used to just use gut feelings, just their instincts, but now with huge amount of data available they can do something much more sophisticated. 10:56:50 Video clip MUSIC IN 10:56:52 VO Throughout the race each car streams performance data back to the team, from tyre fatigue to fuel consumption. The team then plugs this data into a mathematical model of the race. 10:57:09 PTC They can constantly make changing predictions as the race proceeds, Video clip as the positions change, as the lap times change, they can predict the PTC possible outcome if they do a particular action, you know, for example just come in Video clip for a pit stop. And then they can choose the strategy that maximises PTC the chance of the best possible result. 10:67:31 Video clip As Räikkönen’s victory shows the predictions made by the VO models can be extremely powerful and it’s only possible thanks to a mathematical technique that we now use for all sorts of future predictions. 10:57:47 PTC This technique that motor racing teams use to decide what strategy will maximise the chances of winning a race is exactly the same as the technique I use for medical predictions and climate scientists use to predict what might happen to the planet. 34 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:58:02 Video clip MUSIC IN 10:58:05 VO And it’s all due to a stroke of misfortune that befell one particular mathematician just after the Second World War. 10:58:10 PTC Coffee please. In 1946 brilliant mathematician and Video clip physicist Stanislaw Ulam was struck down by a severe bout of ill health, he was hospitalised for weeks and only had the card game Solitaire for entertainment. 10:58:42 VO The aim of the game is to sort a randomly shuffled pack of cards into four piles according to a set of rules, whether Ulam could successfully finish the game depended on the order of the cards he was dealt. 10:58:58 PTC As he played his instinct was to begin to pick apart the game MUSIC OUT 10:59:02 and analyse it mathematically. He became obsessed with trying to predict whether a game would be successful. 10:59:11 VO Ulam hoped he could calculate the probabilities of different outcomes from the very first deal, but he quickly realised this approach would get him nowhere. 10:59:23 PTC The problem was there were just too many possible combinations leading to ever increasingly complex calculations and equations that became impossible to solve, no matter how brilliant a mathematician you were. 10:59:36 VO But Ulam didn’t give up. 10:59:40 Video clip MUSIC IN 35 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 10:59:42 He came up with an entirely different kind of method to solve the problem, in fact it was one that hardly involved maths at all, let me demonstrate with an analogy. 10:59:55 PTC Ahead of me, between me and the wall, I can just about make out a sheet of Perspex. 11:00:00 MUSIC OUT 11:00:01 There’s a hole cut out of the centre in a certain shape, 11:00:04 MUSIC IN but from here there’s no way I can tell what that shape is, but I can find out with a little help. 11:00:14 VO Imagine that working out the shape of the hole is equivalent to Ulam trying to predict outcomes in Solitaire, there’s no way I could work out the answer with maths, I need to play the game. In this case the equivalent of a round of Solitaire is a shot with a paintball gun. 11:00:35 PTC MUSIC IN After a couple of shots I’ve got a few through against the wall, but although I know there is a hole in the Perspex I’ve still no idea what the shape is. It’s like after I’ve just played a couple of rounds of the game, I’m still none the wiser about what outcomes to expect. But if I do this ….. Now with enough shots I’m beginning to get a picture of 11:01:12 what the shape might be. Looks like a rough sort of diamond to me, it’s great fun. This is the same principle as playing the game thousands of times, with enough sample runs we can begin to build an idea of what outcomes to expect. 11:01:34 VO At first sight it sounds like no solution at all, who could sit 36 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT around actually playing Solitaire millions of times to find an answer? What turned Ulam’s ingenious idea into a useful tool was his timing. 11:01:50 Video clips MUSIC OUT The computer had just been invented, that meant you didn’t 11:01:53 have to play the game for real, instead it could be played hundreds of times inside a computer and the computer could then say which starting hands were most likely to lead to a successful game. He called his technique the Monte Carlo Method after the casino where his uncle made so many repeated and random attempts to predict the future. And it turned out to have uses well beyond predicting the outcome of card games. 11:02:29 PTC The beauty of Monte Carlo is that even in complex systems it tells us not only what is likely to happen, 11:02:36 MUSIC IN but how likely it is to happen. 11:02:39 VO In climate science the equivalent of shooting the paintballs Video clips is running climate models hundreds of times, each time a model is run it comes up with a different prediction about the future of the Earth’s climate. The results of many different climate models can then be combined. As the models are run over and over again we can see where the results cluster. 11:03:10 PTC This is the Monte Carlo process in action, the pattern of lines shows us a range of possibilities, but not only that, where the lines are densest this is what the models are saying is the most likely thing to happen. Of course it doesn’t tell us exactly what the future holds, that would be 37 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT impossible, the future is inherently unpredictable, but the Monte Carlo Method gives us an idea not only of what the outcomes might be, but how likely they are. And this is where our crucial number comes from. 11:03:43 VO The graph shows the model’s predictions of how much the Video clip climate will warm as a result of us burning one trillion tons of carbon; the most likely outcome is just below two degrees Celsius of warming. 11:03:58 MUSIC OUT 11:03:59 MUSIC IN 11:04:01 VO Now we understand where the one trillion tons figure comes from we need to consider the second part of the prediction. Why should we worry about a rise of two degrees Celsius? 11:04:18 PTC When we think about what a small average rise in global temperature might mean to us humans perhaps the first thing to think of is weather because we don’t experience climate on a day to day basis, we experience weather and sometimes it can hit us really hard. 11:04:33 11:04:38 MUSIC OUT VO Just a small average temperature rise can hide very Video clips noticeable changes in weather, especially dangerous extremes. As the average rises the tropics will experience more devastating rain storms, whilst areas including the Mediterranean will have more droughts. Britain will suffer more flooding, but it’s not simply the fact that these events might be more frequent that is a concern. 11:05:13 PTC It’s critical that we understand extreme weather events, 38 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT how often and how hard they might hit us and this is the worry with a climate that might warm by as much as two degrees, that it would disrupt that ability because the method we use to predict extreme weather uses a particular type of statistics that’s very sensitive to this type of change, a method in fact that was developed for something quite different. 11:05:39 Video clip MUSIC IN 11:05:43 VO In the early 1920s the cotton mills of England were a vital industry, but the looms often sat idle for as much as a third of the time. The problem was that cotton threads kept snapping. 11:06:02 PTC Every snap could stop production for hours so they needed to work out why the threads broke and what they could do to stop it happening. Fortunately they had the good sense to call in a statistician. 11:06:15 Video clip MUSIC IN 11:06:18 VO The newly formed British Cotton Industry Research Association charged with improving all aspects of the industry dispatched one Leonard Tippit to investigate. Tippit admitted he was woefully 11:06:34 PTC inexperienced, but in the best traditions of British statistics he managed to combine careful collection of data with elegant statistical analysis. VO He toured the mills of Lancashire carefully recording breakage rates and studying the strength of individual fibres. Common sense said that if the average strength of the fibres in one thread was higher than another you’d think there’d be fewer breakages. But Tippit discovered 39 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT that it wasn’t the average strength that was important, it was the weakest thread that really mattered. 11:07:17 PTC It’s like the old saying, a chain is as strong as its weakest link. It’s the extremes that make all the difference 11:07:25 11:07:28 MUSIC OUT VO Tippit’s breakthrough came when he realised he could use the data he’d gathered about the strength of the most common threads to predict how often the very weakest threads would be found. 11:07:37 11:07:42 MUSIC IN VO In other words he’d invented a method of using numbers to predict extreme events from the spread of less extreme events. 11:07:53 PTC Tippit’s insights from the cotton industry led to what is called extreme value theory and it turned out to be amazingly powerful. What used to be considered just unpredictable could be analysed mathematically. 11:08:08 VO And his breakthrough turned out to be vital in the understanding of extreme weather. 11:08:14 Video clip MUSIC OUT 11:08:15 Video clip MUSIC IN 11:08:18 VO In 1953 a huge storm surge was driven down the North Sea towards London, devastating coastal areas. Over three hundred people died in Britain alone. After the floods it was decided something had to be done to protect London in case it ever happened again. It was time to put extreme value theory to the test. 40 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT 11:08:52 PTC This extraordinary piece of engineering was conceived in the 1960s after catastrophic and fatal floods in 1953. These really were extreme events, literally a perfect storm when rare conditions combined to create a terrible night. 11:09:11 MUSIC OUT 11:09:12 MUSIC IN 11:09:14 VO In order to ensure the Barrier would do its job the planners had to predict the most extreme storm surge that could be expected in the future, more extreme and unusual than anything that had been seen before. Extreme value theory together with classic British record keeping was the answer. 11:09:35 PTC They had a century’s worth of data on extreme high tides and using Tippit’s models this allowed them to gauge the chance of events occurring that were so extreme they’d never occurred before. 11:09:52 VO The Thames Barrier was built to stop a once in a thousand years event and so far we’ve not seen a storm come anywhere near testing its limits. But Tippit’s method has an Achilles’ heel, its predictions are based on the assumption that the future will be similar to the past. 11:10:15 10:10:16 MUSIC OUT PTC Extreme value theory uses the frequency of fairly extreme events to give us a good idea of the chances of really extreme events, things we haven’t observed even. But the problem with climate change is that the patterns alter. 11:10:35 VO When the planners were designing the Barrier they had a 41 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT hundred years of data about storms to base their prediction of the thousand year’s storm, but if the climate changes the pattern of storms may well change too and that will mean the data on past storms will no longer be relevant. Without it the predictions made by extreme value theory are unreliable. 11:10:56 PTC The average shift might not actually seem that impressive, but it’s what happens in the extremes that is so important to us and these become a lot less predictable. We can’t just tweak the extreme value theory. 11:11:10 11:11:13 MUSIC IN VO So as our climate changes not only are we likely to suffer more frequent extreme weather we’ll also lose the tool that has allowed us to prepare for such eventualities. 11:11:32 MUSIC OUT 11:11:33 MUSIC IN 11:11:35 VO Climate scientists have used maths and statistics to give us their most likely prediction of the future, sticking to a trillion tons of carbon should cause less than two degrees of warming. But given the inherent unpredictability of the future and the imperfections of our climate models how sure can we be that that prediction is right? With the help of techniques like the Monte Carlo Method the climate scientists have put a number on their certainty, they are at least 66% sure, that means there’s a sting in the tail of the trillion tons figure. 11:12:17 PTC Climate scientists tell us that if you burn a trillion tons of carbon they can be 66% certain that warming should stay 42 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT below two degrees, but there’s another way of looking at this, we could say that they think there’s a one in three chance that warming will be more than two degrees. 11:12:36 VO So the rather sobering conclusion is that even if we burn less than a trillion tons we’re not guaranteed to keep warming below this level, yet we also know that it would take huge changes to our lives to keep to the trillion tons limit, so how should we react? 11:12:56 PTC It’s always really difficult to know what to do when we’re uncertain about the future. Usually we might try to work out the chances of something bad happening and do what we can to avoid it, or to protect ourselves against it. So there’s a very good chance we’ll get old and so we buy a pension. There’s a small chance we’ll have a road accident but we wear a seatbelt. 11:13:18 11:13:23 MUSIC IN VO In each case we weigh up the risk and the reward, that calculation relies on the quality of information available. Scientists have collected and analysed data, come up with plausible theories and used mathematical models to make predictions. But with the climate we can’t do experiments to test those predictions, only time will tell how accurate they are. And if we want to influence our future we can’t wait to find out, we have to choose on the basis of what we know now. 11:14:07 11:14:08 MUSIC OUT PTC When it comes to the climate the scientists have done the calculations for us, but now it’s up to us to decide what 43 BBC SCIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE POST PRODUCTION SCRIPT action to take. 11:14:17 MUSIC IN CREDITS 11:14:47 MUSIC OUT