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Climate change: certainties and uncertainties. Hervé Le Treut, Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique (CNRS/Ecole Normale Supérieure/Ecole Polytechnique/ Université Paris 6) Académie des sciences. Plan of the talk. 1. The main greenhouse gases
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Climate change: certainties and uncertainties Hervé Le Treut, Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique (CNRS/Ecole Normale Supérieure/Ecole Polytechnique/ Université Paris 6) Académie des sciences
Plan of the talk • 1. The main greenhouse gases The emission by human activities: recent evolution The time scales in question: are the past climate variations relevant indicators? How do atmospheric chemical changes affect the Earth radiative budget? • 2. Consequences What is already detectable? How can we predict future evolutions? Models and scenarios. What are the forecasts for the coming century?
During the last century, the atmospheric composition has undergone changes which are unprecedented over the last millenia IPCC, 2001
The yearly use of energy (and associated CO2 emissions) have increased sharply since the second world war, with a direct impact on CO2 concentration. Schilling & al + Observatoire énergie + AIE, cited by Jancovici
100 millions years = 100 000 millenia G. Jacques, communication personnelle
Quaternary evolution follows slow patterns of evolution Milankovitch Obliquity: ~ 40 000 years Eccentricity: ~ 100 000 years Precession of the equinoxes: ~ 21 000 years Illustrations de S. Joussaume (éditions du CNRS,1993)
The rate of current changes is large when compared with observed evolutions over the Quaternary era. GIEC, 20001 (CNRS/CEA)
Changes of global temperature over the last millenium are within a few tenths of a degree Mann, IPCC, 2001
Changes in the atmospheric composition act on complex and interactive systems which had previously reached equilibrium:
First example of a complex system: the global carbon cycle GIEC, 1990 - CDIAC
CO2 emissions per habitant 1 2 0.5
Greenhouse emission per kg of produced food (in France) Jancovici, 2002
Greenhouse gas emission per passenger and kilometer (in France) Jancovici, 2002
OH Pollution: brings CH4 Pollution: brings O3
Another example of a complex system: the energy cycle GIEC, 2001
Atmospheric constituents contributing to the greenhouse effect Anthropogenic(2.8 W/m2) Natural (155 W/m2)
Evolution of the greenhouse effect after some instantaneous emission of one ton Forçage radiatif par tonne émise Année après la perturbation Hauglustaine D., LSCE
Greenhouse Gas Time scale (years) GWP (20 years) GWP (50 years) GWP (100 years) CO2 150 1 1 1 CH4 12 62 23 7 N2O 114 275 296 156 CFC-11 45 6 300 4 600 1 600 CFC-12 100 10 200 10 600 5 200 HCFC-22 12 4 800 1 700 540 HFC-134a 14 3 300 1 300 400 CF4 50 000 3 900 5 700 8 900 SF6 3 200 15 100 22 200 32 400 Greenhouse Warming Potential
Radiative forcing of anthropogenic elements (1750 à 2000) IPCC [2001]
Are consequences already perceptible ? Mann, IPCC, 2001
Change in the extension of mountain glaciers IPCC, 2001
Climate modelling: an old dream which became possible in the last decadesRichardson (1922) An artist view of recent climate models (L. Fairhead /LMD-CNRS) The weather machine
The « simulated planets » are now very similar to the real one Simulation carried out using the Japanese Earth Simulator, JSTEC
IPSLCM4 Increasingly complex models: The IPSL-CM4 Earth System Model Continents Atmosphere Oceans Orchid é e LMD ZT LMD ORCALIM Z Physics Atmospheric circulation Ocean circulation Land Surface Sea ice Soil and vegetation STOMATE PISCES Terrestrialbiogeochemistry Marine biologyand biogeochemistry CarbonCycle Carbon CO2 Carbon INCA Chemistry CH , VOCs, DMS 4 Gases Chemistry Aerosols Nutrients & Aerosols Salt Aerosols
Clouds simulated by models in 1990 … and in 2000
IPCC scenarios: a wide range of possible futures (without taking into account specific policies, such as those linked with Kyoto protocol)
Surface air temperature IPSL-CM4 coupled model A2 Without sulf. aerosol A2 A1B B1 Comit. Control
IPCC 2001 Report • Changes in global mean temperature: