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Policies to Reduce Climate Change Impacts. Jan P r e t e l Czech Hydrometeorological Institute Department of Climate Change 11 th ILA Congress Prague 2006 Prague, 21.5.2006. Main topics. Overview Climate system GHG concentrations & emissions Observed & projected climate changes
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Policies to Reduce Climate Change Impacts Jan P r e t e l Czech Hydrometeorological Institute Department of Climate Change 11th ILA Congress Prague 2006 Prague, 21.5.2006
Main topics • Overview • Climate system • GHG concentrations & emissions • Observed & projected climate changes • Indicators of climate change • Impacts & vulnerabilities • Mitigation – emissions for Kyoto protocol • EU future climate change strategy • Mitigation & Adaptation - reasons to start now • Conclusions
Climate system Highly complex system consisting of • atmosphere • hydrosphere • cryosphere • land surface • biosphere Greenhouse effect • natural (water vapour, CO2 – keeps Earth some 33°C warmer) • anthropogenic (CO2, CH4, N2O, PFC, HFC, SF6 – additional warming) • influence on energy balance
Indicators of climatechange • temperaturerise 0.6 ± 0.2°C in the past century (accelerated during the past two/three decades) • the warmest year in NH = 1998, followed by 2005, 2002, 2003 and 2004 • temperature increase in the 20th century is largest during the past 1000 years • 10% decrease of snow cover since late 1960s • mountain glaciers retreat in non-polar regions • 40 % decline in Artic sea-ice thickness(late summer to early autumn) • sea level rise by 0.1-0.2 m • extreme weather events increase (heavy precipitation, droughts, storms, tornados, hurricanes, etc.) Significant part of the warming is attributed to human activities
GHG concentrations & emissions Over 150 years agoGHG concentrations have increased CO2 by 34%, CH4 by 154%, N2O by 17%, F-gases completely new • have a long lifetime in the atmosphere accumulate over time • are well mixed in the atmosphere their impact on the atmosphere is mostly independent of where they were emitted • have to be addressed on a global scale
Projected CO2 concentrations & reasons for concern Even with the best-case scenario (with a lot of regulations and incentives by governments) when the CO2 emissions will decrease, the temperature will still go up and the sea level will still rise • temperature increase by 2.0 – 6.4oC • sea-level rise by 10 – 90 cm • increase of precipitation in N, decrease in S • decrease of snow cover and sea-ice • weakening of thermohaline circulation • increase of extreme weather events
Impacts of climate change • beneficial and adverse environmental and socio-economic effects • the larger the changes and rate of change in climate, the more the adverse effects • vulnerability of systems • degree to which a system is susceptible to (or unable to cope with) adverse effects of climate change, incl. climate variability and extremes • function of character, magnitude, and rate of climate variation, sensitivity and adaptive capacity • reduction of vulnerabilities and impacts • mitigation (anthropogenic intervention to reduce GHG emissions or enhance sinks) • adaptation (adjustment in natural and human system in response to actual or expected climatic stimuli or their effects
EU future climate change strategy • broadening of participation • leadership role in the multilateral approach to climate change • wider participation on the basis of common but differentiated responsibilities • consistency with other important objectives (e.g. poverty reduction) • negotiating strategy • inclusion of more policy areas • aviation and maritime transport • deforestation of the world’s forests • enhanced innovation • transformation of energy and transport systems • use of market based and flexible instruments • inclusion of adaptation policies
Mitigation approach (future) EU Council of Ministers 2005 („Winning the Battle Against Global Climate Change“) • global average temperatures should not exceed 2 ºC above pre-industrial level • CO2 eq. level = 550 ppmv (1/6 chance) • CO2 eq. level = 650 ppmv (1/16 chance) needs for significant global emissioncut - CO2 eq. level = 400 ppmv • analysis of the costs and benefits • all sectors and GHGs are included • include all major countries • emissions trading and project based mechanisms are fully used • synergies with other policies fully exploited (e.g. Lisbon Strategy, energy security policy, Common Agricultural Policy reform , cohesion policy, and air quality policies, etc.)
Adaptation approach (future) • anticipatory • before impacts are observed • reactive • after impacts have been observed • autonomous • ecological changes in natural systems • planned • result of deliberate policy decisions • private • by individuals as rational self-interest • public • by governments at all levels Adaptive capacity potential or ability of system, region, or community to adapt to the effects or impacts of climate change (varies among countries, socio-economic group, time, etc.)
Reasons to start now • climate change in the future may be more rapid than current projections suggest • anticipatory adaptation is more effective and less costly than „last-minute“ or „emergency“ adaptation • adaptation process will require further research to predict the impacts at regional level in order to develop cost-effective adaptation options • immediate benefits can be gained • from proactiveadaptation to climate variability and extreme atmospheric events • by removing maladaptive policies and practices
Conclusions • Climate change is reality for the 21st century and human effect on climate system cannot be neglected • Natural and anthropogenic reasons • still difficult to differentiate both roles • Dangerous anthropogenic interference with climate system varies among regions depending on • local nature • consequences of climate change, and • adaptive capacity • Mitigation and adaptation measures • Adaptations • reduces exposure to climate risks • still playing relatively minor role in climate policy at the international, regional and national levels • Adaptation and mitigation needs to be equable part of integrated climate policy