The IPCC's "fifth assessment report", to be published on September 27, will - quite like its predecessors - be presented as a portender of ominous happenings. However, as Matt Ridley points out, it is quite possible that the overall effect of global warming will be positive:
It is significant because it points to the very real possibility that, over the
next several generations, the overall effect of climate change will be positive
for humankind and the planet.--
Warming of up to 1.2 degrees Celsius over the next 70 years (0.8 degrees have
already occurred), most of which is predicted to happen in cold areas in winter
and at night, would extend the range of farming further north, improve crop
yields, slightly increase rainfall (especially in arid areas), enhance forest
growth and cut winter deaths (which far exceed summer deaths in most places).
Increased carbon dioxide levels also have caused and will continue to cause an
increase in the growth rates of crops and the greening of the Earth—because
plants grow faster and need less water when carbon dioxide concentrations are
higher.
Up to two degrees of warming, these benefits will generally outweigh the
harmful effects, such as more extreme weather or rising sea levels, which even
the IPCC concedes will be only about 1 to 3 feet during this period.
Yet these latest IPCC estimates of climate sensitivity may still be too high.
They don't adequately reflect the latest rash of published papers estimating
"equilibrium climate sensitivity" and "transient climate response" on the basis
of observations, most of which are pointing to an even milder warming. This was
already apparent last year with two papers—by scientists at the University of
Illinois and Oslo University in Norway—finding a lower ECS than assumed by the
models. Since then, three new papers conclude that ECS is well below the range
assumed in the models. The most significant of these, published in Nature
Geoscience by a team including 14 lead authors of the forthcoming IPCC
scientific report, concluded that "the most likely value of equilibrium climate
sensitivity based on the energy budget of the most recent decade is 2.0 degrees
Celsius." --
Since the last IPCC report in 2007, much has changed. It is now more than 15
years since global average temperature rose significantly. Indeed, the IPCC
chairman Rajendra Pachauri has conceded that the "pause" already may have lasted
for 17 years, depending on which data set you look at. A recent study in Nature
Climate Change by Francis Zwiers and colleagues of the University of Victoria,
British Columbia, found that models have overestimated warming by 100% over the
past 20 years.
Explaining this failure is now a cottage industry in climate science. At
first, it was hoped that an underestimate of sulfate pollution from industry
(which can cool the air by reflecting heat back into space) might explain the
pause, but the science has gone the other way—reducing its estimate of sulfate
cooling. Now a favorite explanation is that the heat is hiding in the deep
ocean. Yet the data to support this thesis come from ocean buoys and deal in
hundredths of a degree of temperature change, with a measurement error far
larger than that. Moreover, ocean heat uptake has been slowing over the past
eight years.
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