Committed Global Warming Risks Triggering Multiple Climate Tipping Points

Author:

Abrams Jesse F.1ORCID,Huntingford Chris2ORCID,Williamson Mark S.13,Armstrong McKay David I.145ORCID,Boulton Chris A.1ORCID,Buxton Joshua E.1ORCID,Sakschewski Boris6ORCID,Loriani Sina6ORCID,Zimm Caroline7ORCID,Winkelmann Ricarda68ORCID,Lenton Timothy M.1

Affiliation:

1. Global Systems Institute University of Exeter Exeter UK

2. UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology Wallingford UK

3. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy University of Exeter Exeter UK

4. Georesilience Analytics Leatherhead UK

5. Stockholm Resilience Centre Stockholms Universitet Stockholm Sweden

6. Earth System Analysis Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) Potsdam Germany

7. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Laxenburg Austria

8. Institute of Physics and Astronomy University of Potsdam Potsdam Germany

Abstract

AbstractMany scenarios for limiting global warming to 1.5°C assume planetary‐scale carbon dioxide removal sufficient to exceed anthropogenic emissions, resulting in radiative forcing falling and temperatures stabilizing. However, such removal technology may prove unfeasible for technical, environmental, political, or economic reasons, resulting in continuing greenhouse gas emissions from hard‐to‐mitigate sectors. This may lead to constant concentration scenarios, where net anthropogenic emissions remain non‐zero but small, and are roughly balanced by natural carbon sinks. Such a situation would keep atmospheric radiative forcing roughly constant. Fixed radiative forcing creates an equilibrium “committed” warming, captured in the concept of “equilibrium climate sensitivity.” This scenario is rarely analyzed as a potential extension to transient climate scenarios. Here, we aim to understand the planetary response to such fixed concentration commitments, with an emphasis on assessing the resulting likelihood of exceeding temperature thresholds that trigger climate tipping points. We explore transients followed by respective equilibrium committed warming initiated under low to high emission scenarios. We find that the likelihood of crossing the 1.5°C threshold and the 2.0°C threshold is 83% and 55%, respectively, if today's radiative forcing is maintained until achieving equilibrium global warming. Under the scenario that best matches current national commitments (RCP4.5), we estimate that in the transient stage, two tipping points will be crossed. If radiative forcing is then held fixed after the year 2100, a further six tipping point thresholds are crossed. Achieving a trajectory similar to RCP2.6 requires reaching net‐zero emissions rapidly, which would greatly reduce the likelihood of tipping events.

Funder

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

Open Society Foundations

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science

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