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Climate Change The consensus of scientific opinion is that the climate is changing rapidly and that those changes are being forced by human activities: industrial, forestry, personal lifestyle choices, and agricultural. This course does not include a debate about the pros and cons of this position because this is a science based, employment preparation course. The political and economic pressures created by climate change will impact the work of and skills required of technical workers. Employers will be forced to change energy use methods either through legislation or public opinion. Therefore technicians will need to improve energy efficiency and sustainability of their workplaces. They will also have to advise about adopting alternative energy sources then troubleshoot, maintain, and repair those systems. The goal with this section is to understand the science behind climate change theory. Note theory is used here in its scientific meaning.) 1 Climate change = global warming = climate instability Throughout the earth’s history (deep time) climate has shifted many times. The evidence is found in geological research and ice core analysis. Often, though not always climate shifts were linked to increases and declines in CO2 levels. High CO2 = hotter temperatures. Other climate changes were related to the earth's orbit and/or the tilt of the earth. So climate is not "set" or stable. It changes usually over long time frames, but occasionally dramatically fast. Temperatures and CO2derived tree rings, coral, ice cores, lake sediments tell us that pre industrial CO2 levels were about 280 ppm. Now they are about 386 ppm, and this increase coincides with the increased combustion of fossil fuels that began with the industrial revolution. Deep time studies: “This confirms the general notion that substantial greenhouse warming is 2 the expected consequences of a buildup of atmospheric CO2." Deep time is difficulty to understand for us short-lived humans. Deep time = a damn long time, so long that humans can not understand its ramifications. During its history earth has been a ball of molten rock, completely ice covered, and mostly tropical. One visualization of the immensity of deep time is this: The distance from an English king's nose to the tip of his outstretched hand is the original standard for the English yard. Imagine deep time as that king extending his arm. One stroke of a nail file on his middle finger erases all of human history. The only constant in life is change Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 3 There are two basic types of climate forcers (external) sun, volcanic eruptions, earth’s orbit, (internal) human activities (anthropogenic) Anthropogenic = carbon dioxide CO2, methane CH4, nitrous oxides N20, aerosols (small particles tend to reflect solar radiation), water vapor Our Earth is warmed by absorbed solar energy. The warm earth radiates heat away into frigid space and this heat energy must pass upward through the atmosphere. As it passes through the atmosphere some of that heat is absorbed by the greenhouse gasses and they warm the surrounding atmosphere. The warmer atmosphere radiates some heat to space, but some returns back to the earth. Today there is less heat being radiated than absorbed so the earth gets gradually warmer. BUT, climate is very, very complicated. For example increasing CO2 leads to global warming which increases the evaporation of water which helps to trap radiated heat and/or the increased water vapor creates more low 4 clouds which trap heat, but the tops of the clouds reflect solar radiation. “The average rate of global warming over the full 20th century was slightly less than 0.1C per decade, but in the past few decades the warming rate has nearly doubled to about 0.2 C per decade.” We would like science to be precise and give exact answers like simple high school chemistry experiments, but in reality science is always modifying its knowledge. New assertions are reported and challenged by other scientists, or experiments are repeated with different results, or observations are reinterpreted. Science is a "best educated guess", but that is better than an uneducated feeling. Evidence for the consequences of climate change: Increasing regional droughts The warmest years in 500 years have been recorded in the past decade Warmer days and nights all over the world 5 More extreme weather Warmer ocean surface temps Mountain snow and glaciers are melting. Mt Hood climbing season is getting shorter. Mt Kilimanjaro has had permanent ice field for 12000 years and it has melted back dramatically since 1912 Ocean levels are rising The theory of global warming predicts these results and the scientific records indicate that this is occurring. The IPCC, 2007 report projections range fro 99% certainty of warmer days and nights, to 90% certainty of more frequent heat waves and heavy rains, to a 66% likelihood of glacier melting, to a 33-59% chance of the West Antarctic ice sheet melting, to a 10% probability of the ocean currents stopping with catastrophic climatic changes including super storms. This very unlikely event is the premise of the movie "Day After Tomorrow" 6 There will be climate change, and no one is sure how much, but it could be bad and that is the worry. In addition many of the greenhouse gasses remain in the atmosphere for centuries so the long-term consequences are difficult to predict. Climate models extremely complex, but they appear accurate when applied to past changes, so they are the best we have now. “Climate sensitivity defines the amount of warming (in degrees Celsius) that we can expect to occur when there is a change in the factors that control climate." It is possible that there could be gradual change or sudden catastrophic changes since we are adding so much green house gas into the atmosphere so quickly. For example temperature rises could be anywhere from 1.5 to 9°C with anything above 5-6°C being very dangerous, possibly fatal. Some, a great deal of the CO2 can be absorbed by the oceans and plants, but there are limits and this could mean more warming. 7 It is possible that the oceans could warm enough to release large amounts of methane "burpes of death" and it goes on and on…. Impacts of global warming Sea level rise floods low coastal lands and islands Loss of ecosystems like wetlands, coral reefs ( Species extinction 20-30% extinct with 2°C – 40-70% with 4°C temperature rise. Floods and droughts Diminished fresh water, evaporated and polluted Famine Disease Deforestation due to fires Mass migrations – wars Polar meltdown = rise in ocean level, permafrost thaw with release of methane 8 What to do Adapt or mitigate adapt = build dykes etc mitigate = reduce CO2 and other greenhouse gasses Costs = pay me now or pay me later. 1-2% GDP now, 20% later Who pays the rich nations, the poor nations? Build dykes, costly & time consuming and evacuating low lying islands is costly Water management = “no regrets” changes for example use less water Agriculture food price increases of between 10 – 40 % depending on the level of temp rise WHAT TO DO? Technological fixes are at hand – will we (society) make the changes which change our economy and lifestyles? 9 As technical workers you will be expected to improve energy efficiency and help with decisions regarding the use and adoption of alternative energy technologies. The big unknown is that countries like China, India, and other Asian nations are rapidly modernizing and their green house gas emissions to rising rapidly, just as those in the more developed world have since 1750. Good luck! Denis Green 10