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Oxford University Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change Myles Allen Departments of Physics, University of Oxford [email protected]

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Page 1: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change

Myles AllenDepartments of Physics, University of Oxford

[email protected]

Page 2: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

What was the most unrealistic aspect of the film “The Day After Tomorrow”?

Page 3: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

South Oxford on January 5th, 2003

Phot

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urte

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f Dav

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itche

ll

Page 4: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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The problem in October 2000 and January 2003: a consistently displaced Atlantic jet-stream

The Atlantic Jet Stream (500hPa wind speed)Autumn climatology (colours) & Autumn 2000 (contours)

Blackburn & Hoskins, 2003

Page 5: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

But the jet-stream varies with the weather: how can we pin down the role of climate change?

“Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get” (Lorenz, 1982)and in the 21st century:“Climate is what you affect, weather is what gets you”

Page 6: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Autumn 2000 events “were extreme, but cannot in themselves be attributed to climate change.”

1947

2000

Page 7: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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It has happened before: Shillingford historic flood levels

2003

Page 8: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

The 2001 conclusions of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

“Most of the warming over the past 50 years is is likely (meaning a better than 2 in 3 chance) to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations.”But what does this tell us about flooding in Oxford?

Page 9: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Model-simulated changes in extreme rainfall in southern England

30-yearevent

12-yearevent

4-yearevent

18602000

2090

Page 10: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Note different scale! Source: IPCC Third Assessment Report

And now for the next century: carbon dioxide trends

Page 11: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

Uncertainty in global warming under two scenarios of future emissions

Page 12: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

Changing emission path buys time but does not eliminate risk

Page 13: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Ranges of uncertainty in regional predictions require multi-model “ensembles”

Global temperature change under 1% per year increasing CO2

(CMIP-2 model inter-comparison)

Global precipitation change under 1% per year increasing CO2

Page 14: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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A shortage of models with high climate sensitivities?

Page 15: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Ranges of opinion in climate sensitivity(Morgan and Keith, 1995)

Page 16: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Dealing with uncertainty in modelling climate change

Climate is predictable, but cannot be directly observed. Weather is observable, but unpredictable.Any statement about climate change involves probabilities: looking at the spread of results from lots of climate simulations. On long time-scales, simulations must allow for uncertainty in modelling, not just chaotic variability in the atmosphere-ocean system.But full-scale climate models are expensive to run: the largest conventional ensembles to date are only 20-50 members…

Page 17: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Objective: find as many as possible alternative, equally realistic, model versions that respond differently to increasing carbon dioxide, to explore the full range of possibilities.

Stan

dard

m

odel

set

-up

Perturbed Physics Ensemble

Initial Condition Ensemble

Forcing Ensemble

Overall G

rand Ensem

ble

10000s 10s10s

Model Versions Simulations

The problem with dealing with uncertainty in climate change prediction

Page 18: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Climateprediction.net: the world’s largest climate modelling facility

~100,000 volunteers, 130 countries, ~6M model-years

....

.

.

Upload servers

Page 19: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Members of the public download and run a full 3-D climate model on their personal computers

Page 20: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

Visualization software for school and undergraduate projects

Page 21: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Active, and self-regulating, user forum

Page 22: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Initial climateprediction.net experiment

Using simplified model ocean to keep runs short15-year calibration, 15-year control, 15-year 2xCO2

Up to 10-member initial-condition ensembles to reduce noise and quantify sampling variability

15 yr spin-up 15 yr, base case CO2

15 yr, 2 x CO2

Derived fluxes

Diagnostics from final 8 yrs.

Calibration

Control

Double CO2

Page 23: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Time-evolving frequency distribution

Remove models that are unstable in the control.

Few remaining negatively drifting 2xCO2 model versions are an unrealistic consequence of using a slab ocean.

Page 24: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Not The Day After Tomorrow: why we got some negative sensitivities…

Page 25: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

Estimating effective climate sensitivity from short 2xCO2 runs

Page 26: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Exploration of parameter space, focussing on identifying non-linear interactions

Perturbations to 21 atmospheric/surface parametersThree values each, including combinationsInitial exploration of 6 parameters (clouds and convection)

P1Low HighStandard

Standard

Low

High

P2

Page 27: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Sensitivities from climateprediction.net

Stainforth et al, 2005

Page 28: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Standard model version

Low sensitivity model

High sensitivity model

Regional responses: temperature and precipitation

Page 29: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Can observations rule out high sensitivities?

Stainforth et al, 2005

CMIP-2 coupled models

Single perturbationsSingle perturbationsOriginal model

Page 30: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Standard model version

Low sensitivity model

High sensitivity model

Regional responses: temperature and precipitation

Page 31: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Still they come: 47334 simulations passing initial quality control

Courtesy of Ben Sanderson

Traditional range

Page 32: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Are these high sensitivities ruled out by the observed response to Mount Pinatubo?

Page 33: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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No: EBM responses to Pinatubo forcingblue = 0.5K sensitivity, deep red = 20K sensitivity

Frame et al, 2005, also fitting ENSO, background climate and effective heat capacity

Page 34: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Are these high sensitivities ruled out by temperatures in the Last Glacial Maximum?

Numbers courtesy of Stefan Rahmstorf and Gavin Schmidt, realclimate.org

∆F=-6.6±1.5W/m2

∆T=-5.5±0.5K

Page 35: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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No: symmetric uncertainty in past forcing →asymmetric, open-ended range for sensitivity

Page 36: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Naïve sampling strategies can give the illusion of a tight upper bound on sensitivity

Page 37: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Would these high sensitivities necessarily be ruled out if we uploaded more diagnostics?

Page 38: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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No: Murphy et al, 2004, distribution without prior weighting towards low sensitivities

Page 39: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Objective constraints on feedback parameter inferred from the climateprediction.net ensemble

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Objective constraints on climate sensitivity inferred from climateprediction.net

Piani et al, 2005

Page 41: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Not the first to report a risk of high sensitivity

Page 42: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Forcing uncertainty: the main obstacle to constraining climate sensitivity

Page 43: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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High risk of substantial warming even with today’s greenhouse gas levels

Traditional range

Page 44: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Lots of studies, same message: weak upper bound on climate sensitivity

If S is “likely” < 4K (P>0.67) thenS is “very likely < ~7K (P>0.9) and we can only sayS “virtually certain” < 10-15K(P>0.99)

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And here’s why:

Observable properties of climate scale with strength of atmospheric feedbacksMost constraints end up fairly Gaussian (Central Limit Theorem)A Gaussian distribution of inverse sensitivity gives…no formal upper bound on climate sensitivity

Page 46: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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High sensitivities and the challenge for the IPCC

In 2001, all studies reported detectable greenhouse warming at >90% confidence, yet IPCC stuck to “unlikely to be entirely natural in origin” (>67%)In 2005, no studies rule out S>5K at >90% confidence except by prior assumption: but will IPCC want to suggest sensitivity is only “likely” <5K?Of course, there is the fact that…No one is likely to drag an IPCC author through the US courts for underestimating the chance of a high sensitivity.

Page 47: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Why they care

Failure to place an upper bound on sensitivity appears to undermine the policy relevance of IPCC.Huge pressure to come up with the killer paper for AR4 (the prize: world-wide fame, and a chocolate from Susan Solomon).New evidence will be indirect: direct observations of GHG-induced warming or TOA fluxes don’t cut it.

Page 48: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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We have been here before

Use of model-simulated variability, and the recovery from the Little Ice Age, undermined the policy relevance of “discernible human influence” in 1995.In 1998, a new hemispheric millennial temperature reconstruction appeared to obviate model-simulated variability (and the Little Ice Age). Of course, that reconstruction may yet turn out right: maybe there was no global Little Ice Age.And maybe the climate sensitivity really is <4K.Premature declarations, even if vindicated, permanently undermine the credibility of the IPCC.

Page 49: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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The irony is, it doesn’t really matter, because we already agree on so much else

Michaels et al, 2000, 2004

Page 50: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Michaels + 7 years

The irony is, it doesn’t really matter, because we already agree on so much else

Page 51: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Given we won’t actually stabilize concentrations indefinitely, why care about sensitivity?

Equilibrium warming under 550ppm stabilisationMaximum warming under 550ppm peak in 2100

Page 52: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Why can’t the IPCC just say

For well-understood physical reasons, we cannot place an objective upper bound on climate sensitivity.So, we cannot estimate the risks associated with a given stabilisation CO2 concentration.But we can estimate the range of transient changes expected over the coming decades, and … We can also estimate the effort required to hit a given temperature target.Sometimes, admission of ignorance is the most policy-relevant option of all.

Page 53: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Implications…

Many studies have found there is some risk of a substantial climate change even with today’s greenhouse gas levels.Climateprediction.net, with the help of the public, confirmed this result for the first time with a full-complexity climate model.But warming takes time (many decades) to emerge: what about the here and now?We mentioned the possibility of increased flood risk, but that was one model study. Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures?

Page 54: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Summer 2003 temperatures relative to 2000-2004

From NASA’s MODIS - Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer, courtesy of Reto Stöckli, ETHZ

Page 55: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Heat-wave blamed for US$12.3 billion uninsured crop losses + US$1.6 billion forest fire damage

Page 56: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Excess mortality rates in early August 2003 indicate 22,000 - 35,000 heat-related deaths

Daily mortality in Baden-Württemberg

Page 57: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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But a single heat-wave is a weather event: how can we pin down the role of climate change?

The immediate cause of the heat-wave was a persistent anti-cyclone over Northwest Europe.There is still no evidence that human influence on climate makes such circulation patterns more likely.Instead, we ask how human influence on climate has affected the risk of such a weather event (however induced) causing such an intense heat-wave?

Page 58: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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June-August temperatures in 2003, relative to 1961-90 mean, Mediterranean region

Page 59: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Modelling Southern European area-averaged June-July-August summer temperatures

Natural drivers onlyAll drivers included

Future projection

Instrumental observations

Page 60: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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External contributions to European summer temperatures, relative to pre-industrial

Anthropogenic

Natural

0.5K

Page 61: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Human contribution to the risk of the 2003 heat-wave: loading the weather dice

Increase in risk

Fraction of current risk attributable to human influence

Range of uncertainty

Page 62: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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Tuyuksu Glacier, Kazakhstan: a vital water source

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Tuyuksu mass balance

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The Spectre of Liability

Modest (0.5oC) background warming substantially increases the risk of extreme high temperatures.It is likely (90% confidence) that past human influence on climate was responsible for at least half the risk of the 2003 European summer heat-wave.“Plaintiffs ... must show that, more probably than not, their individual injuries were caused by the risk factor in question, as opposed to any other cause. This has sometimes been translated to a requirement of a relative risk of at least two.” (Grossman, 2003)

Page 65: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

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By the 2030s, >50% of anthopogenic GHG loading will be due to post-1990 emissions

Page 66: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

What was the most unrealistic aspect of the film “The Day After Tomorrow”?

Page 67: Probability in the attribution and prediction of climate change...Are there other events more closely related to rising temperatures? Oxford University Summer 2003 temperatures relative

Oxford University

There weren’t any lawyers

The contribution of past greenhouse gas emissions to some current climate risks may already exceed 50%, the threshold for civil tort actions.Over the coming decade, both the cost and the inevitability of climate change will become clearer, fuelling demands for compensation for:– Flooding– Heat wave damages and deaths– Threats to water supplies, especially from glacial sources– Coastal erosion etc.

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Giving climate change back to the people

Politicians tend to talk about climate change as an environmental or ethical issue: care for polar bears or future generations.This diverts attention from the injustices that are happening now: we all benefit from burning fossil fuels, but some are losing out much more than others from the impacts of climate change.The risk, even quite remote, of a successful class-action damages suit would have far more impact than any conceivable follow-up to the Kyoto Protocol.

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But what could be done?

How can an oil company or coal miner avoid selling a product whose use involves increasing atmospheric CO2?Simple: they bury (“sequester”) the equivalent amount of carbon.Of course, this would make oil or coal more expensive, which would hurt – but how much?“All OECD countries besides the US impose big taxes on fuel, but curiously it hasn’t reduced consumption.” Lord Browne, BP (Financial Times)

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But what could be done?

Fossil fuels are still remarkably cheap, since we pay for the cost of extraction (and cartel-like profits), not the cost of their impact.If politicians were to apply the “Polluter Pays Principle” to producers of fossil fuels, this would change rapidly: it might well make more sense to sell carbon-neutral fuel than risk liability.