climate change challenges and opportunities ian lowe april 28, 2009
TRANSCRIPT
Climate changeChallenges and Opportunities
Ian Lowe
April 28, 2009
IPCC report, 18 Nov. 2007
• Evidence of warming “unequivocal”
• Effects could be “abrupt or irreversible”
• All countries will be affected
• Poor nations, low-lying areas
• Emission cuts “moderate cost”
• Window of opportunity closing fast
“global average surface temperature now about 0.8o above its level in 1750… significant increases in the incidence of floods, droughts, heat waves and wildfires… it appears the intensity of tropical storms has been increasing as well”
Earth is overheating
Shopping centre car park: Newcastle
Local adaptations
• Temperature regime
• Rainfall patterns
• Sea level
• Extreme events
• Vector-borne disease
• Cropping
• Balance of natural systems
Some economic impacts
• Reduced agricultural production
• Water supply, e.g. Perth desalination
• Extreme events, e.g. 1999 Sydney hailstorm, > $2000 million, 2003 Canberra bushfires ~ $400 million
• Cyclone Larry, ~ $1000 million in direct costs + effect on tourism…
• Defending coastal assets
Impacts on human health
•Direct impacts, e.g. heat stress
•Effects of vector-borne disease
•Severe events: storms, floods
• Indirect effects: food supply, balance of ecological systems
•WHO report, local studies
“There is now compelling evidence that both the extent and the impacts of climate change are likely to be at the higher end of the range projected by the IPCC”
– Australian Climate Group 2008
Copenhagen March 2009
• Upper range of sea level rise > 1 m
• West Antarctic ice sheet unstable ?
• 20 rise, 20 - 40 % Amazon dieback, 30 75 % dieback, effectively irreversible
• 20 rise, forest CO2 absorption ½
• So 20 unsafe, 30 impacts “unthinkable”
How close is 20 ?
• Current CO2 380 ppm• With other GHG, ~ 460 ppm CO2 equiv
• 510 ppm, 67 % chance warming > 20
IPCC chair Rajendra Pachauri
“Every country in the world has to be committed to a shared vision and a set of common goals and actions … help us move toward a much lower level of emissions”
Bali 2007: the way forward
• Political leadership
• “contract and converge” only approach ?
• IPCC 11/07: global cuts by 2015
• Annex I 20 – 45 % by 2020
• Then 80 to 95 % by 2050
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050
Energy Transport Fugitive, waste and industrial processes)Agriculture Land clearing
Kyoto target
60 - 90% reductions
Business As Usual
Source: Adapted from the Australian Greenhouse Gas Inventory and ABARE projections
Australia’s Emissions (Mt)
Where we are now heading
What we need to achieve
Sustainable energy future
• Turn energy more efficiently into services [transport, cooling, lighting, motive power etc]
• Move away from: – supply technologies based on limited
resources – technologies imposing unacceptable
environmental costs
Every country
• Should recognise as global issue
• Should develop its own approach– Local needs
– Local resources
– Cultural traditions
– Social structures
– Economic opportunities
Crisis = danger + opportunity
Some economic opportunities
• Clean energy supply systems
• Demand management technologies
• Efficient appliances
• Information technologies
• Improved communications
• Resource - efficient approaches
• Water supply and use
• Efficient food production
“We need a new ethic by which every human being realises the importance of the challenge and starts to take action through changes in lifestyle and attitude” - Pachauri
Conclusion
•We can make a difference•A global effort needed to
prevent dangerous climate change
•“the over-arching issue”•Our moral responsibility to
other species and to future generations
What we do today determines the
world we live in tomorrow
Xie xie
Thank you for listening
Any questions?