Climate Change Impacts Already Happening, Report
Media Release
7 April 2007
Climate Change Impacts Already Happening, Says Report
Earlier signs of spring, changes in bird migration, and warming lakes and rivers show climate change impacts are already with us, says the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
The Summary for Policymakers from the Fourth Assessment by the IPCC’s Working Group II was approved overnight in Brussels following a plenary session involving government representatives and scientists from more than 130 countries. The summary sets out the working group’s key policy-relevant findings.
Emeritus Professor Blair Fitzharris of the University of Otago is Convening Lead Author for the Australia/NZ chapter of the report and is in Brussels for the plenary. He says the impacts of climate change are already evident across the globe.
“The working group has looked at a wide body of evidence and concluded that recent regional changes in temperature have had a discernable impact on many physical and biological systems,” said Professor Fitzharris.
The report draws
on over 29,000 data series of observed changes. The observed
evidence detailed in the report focuses on the most
sensitive natural processes, including:
• Enlargement
and increase in numbers of glacial lakes;
• Increased
ground instability in permafrost regions and rock avalanches
in mountain regions;
• Changes to water flows from
glacier and snow-fed rivers;
• Warming lakes and rivers
in many regions;
• Earlier signs of spring, including
leaf unfolding, bird migration and egg
laying;
• Changes in habitat of plants and animal
species.
Climate change impacts could affect millions of
people
The report identifies Africa as one of the most
vulnerable continents “because of multiple stresses and
low adaptive capacity”. It says in Asia, “more than a
billion people” could be adversely affected by decreased
freshwater availability by the 2050s, due to climate change
and other pressures. And small islands, including those
located in the tropics, are “especially vulnerable to the
effects of climate change, sea level rise, and extreme
events.”
Amongst the striking statements in the
report:
• “Many millions more people are projected to
be flooded every year due to sea level rise by the 2080s.
The numbers affected will be largest in the mega-deltas of
Asia and Africa, while small islands are especially at
risk.”
• With regard to human health, “Projected
climate change is likely to affect the health status of
millions of people.”
“The scale of the potential impacts depends crucially on how much warming we get, and that depends on global greenhouse gas emissions. By 2020, between 75 and 250 million people in Africa are projected to be exposed to an increase of water stress due to climate change. Studies assessed for the report indicate a further one degree of warming pushes those numbers up to 350–600 million,” says Professor Fitzharris.
New info puts
spotlight on ecosystems
Since the last IPCC Assessment
much new information has become available. The new report
says “the resilience of many ecosystems is likely to be
exceeded this century by an unprecedented combination of
climate change, associated disturbances (e.g., flooding,
drought, wildfire, insects, ocean acidification), and other
global change drivers.” It says roughly 20–30% of
species assessed so far “are likely to be at high risk of
irreversible extinction” if increases in global average
temperature exceed 1.5–2.5 °C.
The IPCC says that after the middle of this century carbon dioxide uptake by terrestrial ecosystems is “likely to weaken or even reverse, thus amplifying climate change.”
Impacts
certain but adaptation lags behind
Some warming is
inevitable. The February IPCC report said that even if we
shut off greenhouse gas emissions today, the world is
committed to a 0.6 °C rise in global average surface
temperature by 2100. Today’s report says “a portfolio of
adaptation and mitigation measures can diminish the risks of
climate change”.
“We need to adapt now to some inevitable impacts, as well as taking action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” says Professor Fitzharris. “The benefits of adaptation are immediate, and are required to reduce vulnerability, but there are barriers, limits, and costs to adaptation.”
Future vulnerability
depends on development pathways
There are various
possible ways in which the world’s population and
economies might develop over the 21st century. These will be
a strong determinant of the level of vulnerability to
climate change. For example, if economic growth continues
apace in South and East Asia, more resources could be
directed towards adaptation such as building levees and
dykes to protect against flooding and sea-level rise.
But Professor Fitzharris points out that “over the long run, adaptation alone can’t deal with all the projected effects of climate change, even in the richest nations. Eventually adaptation will be insufficient to reduce vulnerability.”
Notes to Editors
1. Summary for
Policymakers available on-line: www.ipcc.ch
A Summary for
Policymakers is a non-technical summary of a working group
report.
2. Full regional impacts report to be released on
Tuesday 10 April
NZ media can obtain details of key
findings from the chapter on Australia/New Zealand impacts,
and the chapter on impacts for small islands, on Tuesday 10
April as part of a worldwide series of IPCC Regional
Briefings.
Time: 1030 refreshments; briefing at 1100
sharp
Place: NIWA, 269 Khyber Pass Road, Newmarket,
Auckland
3. IPCC Fourth Assessment – two parts out; two
to go
This follows the release in January of the findings
of the IPCC’s Working Group I which dealt with the
physical science underpinning our understanding of climate
change and its causes.
The third part of the IPCC Fourth
Assessment Report, dealing with mitigation of climate
change, is due to be considered at a meeting in Bangkok on
30 April–3 May 2007.
A final Synthesis Report, pulling together policy-relevant information from all three working groups, will be released in November.
4. What is
the IPCC?
The IPCC was established in 1988. It produces
regular, independent scientific assessments of the current
state of knowledge on climate change. These include the
major six-yearly assessment reports, and special reports of
a more or less technical nature. Membership of the IPCC is
open to all member countries of the World Meteorological
Organization and the UN Environment Program.