Four degrees and beyond: the potential for a global temperature increase of four degrees and its implications

Author:

New Mark1,Liverman Diana2,Schroder Heike3,Anderson Kevin45

Affiliation:

1. School of Geography and Environment and Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

2. Institute of the Environment, University of Arizona and Environmental Change Institute, Oxford, UK

3. Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and Environment, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

4. Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering, University of Manchester, PO Box 88, Manchester M60 1QD, UK

5. School of Environmental Sciences and School of Development, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7JT, UK

Abstract

The 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate Change commits signatories to preventing ‘dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system’, leaving unspecified the level of global warming that is dangerous. In the late 1990s, a limit of 2 ° C global warming above preindustrial temperature was proposed as a ‘guard rail’ below which most of the dangerous climate impacts could be avoided. The 2009 Copenhagen Accord recognized the scientific view ‘that the increase in global temperature should be below 2 degrees Celsius’ despite growing views that this might be too high. At the same time, the continued rise in greenhouse gas emissions in the past decade and the delays in a comprehensive global emissions reduction agreement have made achieving this target extremely difficult, arguably impossible, raising the likelihood of global temperature rises of 3 ° C or 4 ° C within this century. Yet, there are few studies that assess the potential impacts and consequences of a warming of 4 ° C or greater in a systematic manner. Papers in this themed issue provide an initial picture of the challenges facing a world that warms by 4 ° C or more, and the difficulties ahead if warming is to be limited to 2 ° C with any reasonable certainty. Across many sectors—coastal cities, agriculture, water stress, ecosystems, migration—the impacts and adaptation challenges at 4 ° C will be larger than at 2 ° C. In some cases, such as farming in sub-Saharan Africa, a +4 ° C warming could result in the collapse of systems or require transformational adaptation out of systems, as we understand them today. The potential severity of impacts and the behavioural, institutional, societal and economic challenges involved in coping with these impacts argue for renewed efforts to reduce emissions, using all available mechanisms, to minimize the chances of high-end climate change. Yet at the same time, there is a need for accelerated and focused research that improves understanding of how the climate system might behave under a +4 ° C warming, what the impacts of such changes might be and how best to adapt to what would be unprecedented changes in the world we live in.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

Reference54 articles.

1. Article 2 of the UNFCCC: Historical Origins, Recent Interpretations

2. Conventions of climate change: constructions of danger and the dispossession of the atmosphere

3. UNFCCC. 2010 Copenhagen Accord 2010. See http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2009/cop15/eng/l07.pdf.

4. Richardson K. et al. 2009 Climate change—global risks challenges & decisions. Synthesis report Copenhagen University Denmark.

5. IPCC. 2001 Summary for policymakers. Climate change 2001: impacts adaptation and vulnerability. See http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg2/pdf/wg2TARspm.pdf.

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