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Climate Change Elements for a discussion. IFAD Rome, May 18-19, 2007 Alejandro Deeb. % change in runoff by 2050. Many of the major “food-bowls” of the world are projected to become significantly drier Globally there will be more precipitation Higher temperatures will tend to reduce run off
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Climate ChangeElements for a discussion IFAD Rome, May 18-19, 2007 Alejandro Deeb
% change in runoff by 2050 • Many of the major “food-bowls” of the world are projected to become significantly drier • Globally there will be more precipitation • Higher temperatures will tend to reduce run off • A few important areas drier (Mediterranean, southern South America, northern Brazil, west and south Africa)
Fewer rainy days But heavier rain Some climate change issues • Patterns of precipitation and runoff will change substantially • Rain in fewer, heavier events leading to more floods and dry spells; less ground water recharge Projections for increased number of rainy days (left) and amount of rain per wet day (Right) for 2041-2060 period based on modeling (HadRM2)
Europe:Changing flood frequencyLenher et al 2006 Climatic Change • Over much of Europe “one in a hundred year floods” will occur every couple of decades
1987 1982 2005 1997 South America:Yanamarey Glacier, Peru
Retreat in volume and area of the Chacaltaya glacier (Bolivia) since 1940 Source: Francou, 2004
Sea-surface temperature anomaly in the Caribbean for August 2005 (0.5 Celsius isothermals above 1961-1990 average) Source: IRI, 2005
The Greenhouse Effect Met Office Hadley Centre
Strong Global WarmingObserved Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research Based on Folland et al (2000) and Jones and Moberg (2003)
Rapid rise in the stock of Carbon Dioxide in the atmosphere post 1850: Source: IPCC TAR (slide taken from Hadley Centre)
Flows of emissions of CO2 from burning fossil-fuels have risen rapidly since 1950 Gt CO2 Source: World Resources Institute, CAIT
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES), published in 2000 The A1 storyline and scenario describes a future world of very rapid economic growth, global population that peaks in mid-century and declines thereafter and, in several variations of it, the rapid introduction of new and more efficient technologies. Major underlying themes are convergence between regions, capacity-building, and increased cultural and social interactions, with a substantial reduction in regional differences in per capita income. A1 is subdivided into A1FI (fossil-fuel intensive), A1T (high-technology), and A1B (balanced), with A1FI generating the most CO2 emissions and A1T the least (of the A1 storyline, and the second lowest emissions of all six marker scenarios). But even in the A1T world, atmospheric concentrations of CO2 still near a doubling of preindustrial levels by 2100. For a contrasting vision of the world’s social and technological future, SRES offers the B1 storyline, which is (marginally) the lowest-emissions case of all the IPCC’s scenarios. The storyline and scenario family is one of a converging world with the same global population as A1, peaking in mid-century and declining thereafter, but with more rapid change in economic structures towards service and information economies, which is assumed to cause a significant decrease in energy intensity. The B1 world finds efficient ways of increasing economic output with less material, cleaner resources, and more efficient technologies. Many scientists and policymakers have doubted whether a transition to a B1 world is realistic and whether it can be considered equally likely when compared to the scenarios in the A1 family. The IPCC did not discuss probabilities of each scenario, making a risk-management framework for climate policy problematic since risk is probability times consequences.
Dangerous climate • 0.6 C Coral bleaching • 0.6 C West Antarctic losing ice • 0.7 C Kilimanjaro glacier gone • 1.0 C Tropical Glacier in the Andes gone • 1.6 C Onset of melting of Greenland • 2-3 C Collapse of Amazon rainforest • 4 C Collapse of THC current • Source: Exeter Conference, 2005
Where is it coming from? Country Total Ton/GDP Ton/cap (BTA) ton/$Mpp • USA 6.9 720 24.6 • EU-25 4.7 450 10.5 • Germany 1.0 470 12.3 • Japan 1.3 400 10.4 • China 4.9 1020 3.9 • India 1.9 770 1.9 • Mexico 0.5 590 5.2 • Brazil 0.8 680 5.0 • Total 33.6 • Source: WRI, 2006
To stabilise at below 550 ppm, emissions must start to fall soon & developing countries must be part of the solution Business as usual (A2) Source IPPC
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