Global heating could become "catastrophic" for humanity if temperature rises are worse than many predict or cause cascades of events we have yet to consider, or indeed both. The world needs to start preparing for the possibility of a "climate endgame."
This is
according to an international team of researchers led by the University of
Cambridge, who propose a research agenda for facing up to bad-to-worst-case
scenarios. These include outcomes ranging from a loss of 10% of the global
population to eventual human extinction.
In a paper
published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
the researchers call on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to
dedicate a future report to catastrophic climate change to galvanize research
and inform the public.
"There
are plenty of reasons to believe climate change could become catastrophic, even
at modest levels of warming," said lead author Dr. Luke Kemp from
Cambridge's Center for the Study of Existential Risk.
"Climate
change has played a role in every mass extinction event. It has helped fell
empires and shaped history. Even the modern world seems adapted to a particular
climate niche," he said.
"Paths
to disaster are not limited to the direct impacts of high temperatures, such as
extreme weather events. Knock-on effects such as financial crises, conflict,
and new disease outbreaks could trigger other calamities, and impede recovery
from potential disasters such as nuclear war."
Kemp and
colleagues argue that the consequences of 3 degrees Celsius warming and beyond,
and related extreme risks, have been under-examined.
Modeling
done by the team shows areas of extreme heat (an annual average temperature of
over 29 degrees Celsius), could cover two billion people by 2070. These areas
not only some of the most densely populated, but also some of the most
politically fragile.
"Average
annual temperatures of 29 degrees currently affect around 30 million people in
the Sahara and Gulf Coast," said co-author Chi Xu of Nanjing University.
"By
2070, these temperatures and the social and political consequences will
directly affect two nuclear powers, and seven maximum containment laboratories
housing the most dangerous pathogens. There is serious potential for disastrous
knock-on effects," he said.
Last
year's IPCC report suggested that if atmospheric CO2 doubles from
pre-industrial levels—something the planet is halfway towards—then there is an
roughly 18% chance temperatures will rise beyond 4.5 degrees Celsius.
However,
Kemp co-authored a "text mining" study of IPCC reports, published
earlier this year, which found that IPCC assessments have shifted away from
high-end warming to increasingly focus on lower temperature rises.
This
builds on previous work he contributed to showing that extreme temperature
scenarios are "underexplored relative to their likelihood." "We
know least about the scenarios that matter most," Kemp said.
The team
behind the PNAS paper propose a research agenda that includes what they call
the "four horsemen" of the climate endgame: famine and malnutrition,
extreme weather, conflict, and vector-borne diseases.
Rising
temperatures pose a major threat to global food supply, they say, with
increasing probabilities of "breadbasket failures" as the world's
most agriculturally productive areas suffer collective meltdowns.
Hotter and
more extreme weather could also create conditions for new disease outbreaks as
habitats for both people and wildlife shift and shrink.
The
authors caution that climate breakdown would likely exacerbate other
"interacting threats": from rising inequality and misinformation to
democratic breakdowns and even new forms of destructive AI weaponry.
One
possible future highlighted in the paper involves "warm wars" in
which technologically enhanced superpowers fight over both dwindling carbon
space and giant experiments to deflect sunlight and reduce global temperatures.
More focus
should go on identifying all potential tipping points within "Hothouse
Earth" say researchers: from methane released by permafrost melts to the
loss of forests that act as "carbon sinks," and even potential for
vanishing cloud cover.
"The
more we learn about how our planet functions, the greater the reason for
concern," said co-author Prof Johan Rockström, Director of the Potsdam
Institute for Climate Impact Research.
"We increasingly
understand that our planet is a more sophisticated and fragile organism. We
must do the math of disaster in order to avoid it," he said.
Co-author
Prof Kristie Ebi from the University of Washington said: "We need an
interdisciplinary endeavor to understand how climate change could trigger human
mass morbidity and mortality."
Added
Kemp: "We know that temperature rise has a 'fat tail," which means a
wide range of lower probability but potentially extreme outcomes. Facing a
future of accelerating climate change while remaining blind to worst-case
scenarios is naive risk-management at best and fatally foolish at worst."
Reference: Research Paper

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