Climate Change: The Move to Action(AOSS 480) // NRE 501)
Richard B. Rood734-647-3530
2525 Space Research Building (North Campus)[email protected]
http://aoss.engin.umich.edu./people/rbrood
Winter 2008January 3, 2008
Class News
• There will be a ctools site by the weekend
• First Reading: Spencer Weart’s The Discovery of Global Warming
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/index.html
– And in particular two subsections• Carbon dioxide greenhouse effect:
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/co2.htm• Simple climate models http://
www.aip.org/history/climate/simple.htm
Outline of lecture
• Who am I?
• Course Description Overview
• Some questions and Discussion
• Glimpse in the Climate Change Problem
• Science-Mitigation-Adaptation Framework
Who Am I?http://aoss.engin.umich.edu./people/rbrood
• Scientist at NASA publishing in ozone modeling, climate modeling, physically-based analysis of observations– Current interest intersection of
weather and climate
• Manager at NASA, modeling, data analysis, and high-performance computing
• Detailed to Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) 1999-2000
• Participant in national and international assessments of ozone depletion and environmental impact of aircraft (IPCC)
• Advocate and developer of multi-agency programs in the U.S. to address climate change problems
• Participant in the development of U.S. high-performance computing policy
Who Am I?
• At U o’ Michigan teach– Geophysical Fluid
Dynamics– Climate Change: The Move
to Action• Takes a systems
approach to climate change
– Science and how it sits in relationship to many other problems.
• Projects that took a hard look at a number of complex problems and tried to make recommendations … or at least evaluate the impact.
• Projects from previous climate change course
– Carbon emissions trading and their role in climate change
– Fuel taxes and the reduction of carbon emissions
– Great Lakes fisheries and climate change
– New Orleans (2 projects)• Sea level rise
• Public health, petroleum industry infrastructure.
– Coal-fueled power plants in Texas– Role of the World Trade
Organization in carbon trading
Rood’s AOSS Web Site
• http://aoss.engin.umich.edu./people/rbrood
SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE
What are the pieces which we must consider?(what are the consequences)
Belief System Values Perception Cultural Mandate Societal Needs
information flow: research, journals, press, opinion, …
SecurityFood
EnvironmentalNational
Societal SuccessStandard of Living
...???...
ECONOMICSPOLICY
“BUSINESS” PUBLIC HEALTH SOCIAL JUSTICE
ENERGYRELIGION ??????
From Course Description
• Identify the important elements of science, policy, economics, public health, etc.– Where should we pay attention?– What do we know versus what do we believe?
• Identify and map the interactions between these elements and connections to other external elements– How big is the problem?
• How is all of this changing?
A Detail about the Course
• This year the first few weeks of the course is serving double duty. – Climate Change: The Move to Action– Introduction for science graduate students
who will be splitting off into a separate section after a few weeks.
• They will do in depth quantitative study of component(s) of climate system
– Water in physical climate– Cryosphere.
Course Project
• Reflective of workplace …– “Complex Problems with no Known Solutions.”
• Groups of individuals with varied expertise• Responsive to “news”
– Relationship of news to science• Project will provide recommendations, a strategy for addressing the
complex problem.– What are first steps?– What do we need to look out for as these steps are taken?
• Monitor progress // briefing during the course– Use of community web page– Development of wiki book– Possible publication on widely accessed web site.
• Presentation at end of course– Nomination for student prize
Questions
• When some one asks you about global warming, or you hear about global warming, what is your first reaction?– Is it bogus?
• Do you think that the planet is warming?• Is this warming consequential?• Is this warming manmade?• Can we do something about it?• What are the questions you want answered in
this course?
Notes from Discussion
• Long-term 600 year shift• There is enough knowledge to
do something. (More certain than science of HIV/AIDS.)
• Global problem, but response by individuals
• Fear• Misnomer: climate change, not
warming– Climate is always changing
• Fashionable, currently in favor, but what do we do in the long term?
• Need of technology to address the problem
• “Skeptics” feed off of inconsistencies. Cooling in 1970s– Difference between 1970s and
today• Regional and local initiatives• Sovereign states• Protection of investments and
interests motivate the players• Blown out of proportion relative
to other problems• Role of media: Present two
sides as if knowledge to support both sides is equal. Then we decide.
• Epic, global scale• Energy, Energy, Energy
Questions, Discussion
• I want this course to include discussion, questions, unification, and expansion of ideas.– But to avoid “group think”
• Please suggest topics you are especially interested in.
Glimpse into the issues of Climate Change
• Some global climate predictions
The motivator: Increase of CO2
(Keeling et al., 1996)
Note: There isconsistency from many models, many scenarios, that there will be warming. (1.5 – 5.5 C)
Also, it’s still going up in 2100!
Basic physics of temperature increase is very simple, non-controversial.
The prediction:
Projected Global Temperature Trends
IPCC ‘01
2071-2100 temperatures relative to 1961-1990.Special Report on Emissions Scenarios Storyline B2 (middle of the road warming).
Next Time
• We’ll really get started next time!