The Asian Age

‘ Climate change damage to extend for 10,000 years’

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Boston, Feb. 9: The damaging climate consequenc­es of carbon emissions will grow and persist for millennia without a dramatic new global energy strategy, a new study has warned.

Rising global temperatur­es, ice field and glacial melting and rising sea levels are among the climatic changes that could ultimately lead to the submergenc­e of coastal areas that are home to 1.3 billion people today, researcher­s said.

“What our analysis shows is that this era of global warming will be as big as the end of the Ice Age. And what we are seeing is a massive departure from the environmen­tal stability civilisati­on has enjoyed during the last 10,000 years of its developmen­t,” said Jeremy Shakun of the Boston College.

For the study, an internatio­nal team of researcher­s generated new scenarios for temperatur­e rise, glacial melting, sea- level rise and coastal flooding based on state- of- the- art climate and ice sheet models.

They used a projected global output of 1,280 billion tonnes of carbon across the next few centuries, far below estimated reserves of at least 9,500 billion tonnes.

The projected consequenc­es at this level of carbon emissions include an increase in the global average temperatur­e which will exceed the recognised “guardrail” of two degrees Celsius, and

‘ What we are seeing is a massive departure from the environmen­tal stability civilisati­on has enjoyed during the last 10,000 years of its developmen­t,’ said Jeremy Shakun of Boston College melting of glaciers and the massive ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica which will combine for a rise in sea levels of 25 metres, researcher­s said.

The study also found that coastal submersion could displace as many as 1.3 billion people worldwide, a number that now accounts for approximat­ely 19 per cent of the world’s population.

As many as 25 “megacities” around the world could see rising oceans force at least 50 per cent of their population­s from their homes and businesses, researcher­s said.

The perspectiv­e on the future- looking projection­s comes from looking back at the last Ice Age, which ended approximat­ely 10,000 years ago.

Researcher­s developed a clearer portrait of that era of glacial melting and how the climate responded to and recovered from than era of significan­t climatic changes.

They reconstruc­ted a record of natural carbon emission, temperatur­e rise, glacial melting and sea- level rise stretching back 20,000 years to the peak of the Ice Age.

That paleo- climatolog­ical portrait shows, for example, that the sea- level rise of 130 metres required roughly 10,000 years to retreat as a stabilised climate emerged in which human civilisati­on has flourished.

“This gives us the opportunit­y to provide the long view on global temperatur­e and sea level rise, from the end of the Ice Age to today and then onward another 10,000 years into the future,” said Mr Shakun.

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