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IPCC Synthesis Report Part II - Habiba Gitay • Climate change: observed and projected–changes in the mean state, variability and extreme events • Observed and projected impacts of climate change on ecological systems, socio-economic sectors (including human health), and approaches to adapt to climate change Human activities have changed the composition of the atmosphere since the pre- industrial era Atmosphere 3.3 This is the “greenhouse” problem Humans are perturbing the carbon cycle The KP seeks to reduce total emissions by about 0.2 750 62.3 60 6.3 16,000 1.6 500 Plants Soil Driven by fossil fuel emissions 92.3 2000 Estimated Fossil Deposits About 90 …and land clearing Oceans 39,000 Units Gt C for stores & Gt C y-1 for fluxes The oceans and land vegetation are currently taking up 4.6 Gt C per year The Land and Oceans have warmed Precipitation patterns have changed The frequency, persistence and magnitude of ElNino events have increased in the last 20 years El Niño years La Niña years The El-Nino phenomena leads to floods and droughts throughout the tropics and subtropics Sea Levels have risen Observed regional changes in temperature have been associated with observed changes in physical and biological systems Examples include: • non-polar glacier retreat • reduction in Arctic sea ice extent and thickness in summer • earlier flowering and longer growing and breeding season for plants and animals in the N.H. • poleward and upward (altitudinal) migration of plants, birds, fish and insects; earlier spring migration and later departure of birds in the N.H. • increased incidence of coral bleaching Weather-related economic damages have increased Global mean surface temperatures have increased Most of the observed warming in the past 50 years is attributable to human activities Greenhouse gas emissions and concentrations, temperature and sea level are projected to change Global mean surface temperature is projected to increase during the 21st century Land areas are projected to warm more than the oceans with the greatest warming at high latitudes Annual mean temperature change, 2071 to 2100 relative to 1990: Global Average in 2085 = 3.1oC Some areas are projected to become wetter, others drier with an overall increase projected Annual mean precipitation change: 2071 to 2100 Relative to 1990 Mean sea level is projected to rise by 0.09 to 0.88m by 2100, but with significant regional variations Extreme Weather Events are Projected to Increase Projected changes during the 21st century Examples of impacts • Higher maximum temperatures; • Increased mortality in old people more hot days and heatwaves in urban areas over nearly all land areas (very • Damage to crops likely) • Heat stress on livestock • Higher minimum temperatures; • Extended range of pests and fewer cold days frost days and diseases cold spells over nearly all land • Loss of some crop/fruit areas (very likely) slides, mudslides, damage to • more intense precipitation events • Land property and increased insurance over many areas (very likely) costs • increased summer drying over • Reduced rangeland productivity, most mid-latitude continental increased wildfires, decreased interiors and associated risk of hydropower drought (likely) • increase in tropical cyclone peak • Damage to various ecological and socioeconomic systems wind intensity, mean and peak precipitation intensities (likely) More adverse than beneficial impacts on biological and socioeconomic systems are projected Increased water availability in some water-scarce regions, and decreased water availability in many water scarce regions Initially increased agricultural productivity in some mid-latitude regions & reduction in the tropics and sub-tropics even with warming of a few degrees 2020s 2050s 2080s Significant disruptions of ecosystems from disturbances such as fire, drought, pest infestation and invasion of species Changes in the productivity and composition of ecological systems, with coral reefs and boreal forests being most vulnerable Branching coral Brain coral coral bleaching events are expected to increase Ecological systems have many interacting non-linear processes and are thus subject to abrupt changes and threshold effects arising from relatively small changes in driving variables, such as climate. For example: Temperature increase beyond a threshold, which varies by crop and variety, can affect key development stages of some crops and result in severe losses in crop yields. Increased risk of floods, potentially displacing tens of millions of people, due to sea level rise and heavy rainfall events, especially in Small Island States and lowlying deltaic areas. Bangladesh is projected to lose about 17% of its land area with a sea level rise of one meter - very difficult to adapt due to lack of adaptive capacity projected present Effect on human health… Reduced winter mortality in mid- and highlatitudes Increased incidence of heat stress mortality, and the number of people exposed to vectorborne diseases, such as malaria and dengue and water-borne diseases such as cholera, especially in the tropics and sub-tropics Developing countries are the most vulnerable to climate change • Impacts are worse - already more flood and drought prone and a large share of the economy is in climate sensitive sectors • Lower capacity to adapt because of a lack of financial, institutional and technological capacity and access to knowledge • Climate change is likely to impact disproportionately upon the poorest countries and the poorest persons within countries, exacerbating inequities in health status and access to adequate food, clean water and other resources. • Net market sector effects are expected to be negative in most developing countries Adaptation has the potential to reduce adverse effects of climate change and can often produce immediate ancillary benefits, but cannot prevent all damages • Numerous adaptation options have been identified that can reduce adverse and enhance beneficial impacts of climate change, but will incur costs • Greater and more rapid climate change would pose greater challenges for adaptation