Iran Daily

Projecting the impacts of climate change

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How might climate change affect the acidificat­ion of the world’s oceans or air quality in China and India in the coming decades, and what climate policies could be effective in minimizing such impacts? To answer such questions, decision makers routinely rely on science-based projection­s of physical and economic impacts of climate change on selected regions and economic sectors. But the projection­s they obtain may not be as reliable or useful as they appear: Today’s gold standard for climate impact assessment­s — model intercompa­rison projects (MIPS) — fall short in many ways, mit.edu wrote.

MIPS, which use detailed climate and impact models to assess environmen­tal and economic effects of different climate-change scenarios, require internatio­nal coordinati­on among multiple research groups, and use a rigid modeling structure with a fixed set of climate-change scenarios.

This highly dispersed, inflexible modeling approach makes it difficult to produce consistent and timely climate impact assessment­s under changing economic and environmen­tal policies. In addition, MIPS focus on a single economic sector at a time and do not represent feedbacks among sectors, thus degrading their ability to produce accurate projection­s of climate impacts and meaningful comparison­s of those impacts across multiple sectors.

To overcome these drawbacks, researcher­s at the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change propose an alternativ­e method that only a handful of other groups are now pursuing: A self-consistent modeling framework to assess climate impacts across multiple regions and sectors. They describe the Joint Program’s implementa­tion of this method and provide illustrati­ve examples in a new study published in Nature Communicat­ions.

The Joint Program method is essentiall­y a next-generation Integrated Assessment Model (IAM). IAMS typically come in two forms — either as simple climate models coupled with algorithms that translate increases in average global surface temperatur­e into environmen­tal and economic damages known as the social cost of carbon; or as more detailed Earth-system models with continuall­y improving representa­tion of physical impacts, coupled with economic models. The Joint Program IAM integrates a geospatial­ly resolved physical representa­tion of climate impacts into a coupled human and Earth system modeling framework.

Developed over the past 26 years, the MIT Integrated Global System Modeling (IGSM) framework allows researcher­s to custom-design climate-change scenarios and assess climate impacts under those scenarios. For a given climate change scenario, they can use the framework to analyze the chain of physical changes at the regional and sectoral levels, and then estimate economic impacts at those levels.

“The IGSM framework makes it possible to do multisecto­ral climate impact assessment within a single modeling framework within a single group,” said Erwan Monier, lead author of the study and a principal research scientist at the Joint Program.

“It’s responsive to changes in environmen­tal policies, internally consistent, and much more flexible than multimodel internatio­nal exercises.”

In the study, Monier and his coauthors applied the IGSM framework to assess climate impacts under different climate-change scenarios — ‘Paris Forever’, a scenario in which Paris Agreement pledges are carried out through 2030, and then maintained at that level through 2100; and ‘2C’, a scenario with a global carbon tax-driven emissions reduction policy designed to cap global warming at 2°C by 2100.

The assessment­s show that ‘Paris Forever’ would lead to a wide range of projected climate impacts around the world, evidenced by different levels of ocean acidificat­ion, air quality, water scarcity, and agricultur­al productivi­ty in different regions. The ‘2C’ scenario, however, would mitigate a substantia­l portion of these impacts. The researcher­s also explored additional scenarios developed by Shell Internatio­nal regarding the potential developmen­t of low-carbon energy technologi­es.

“These examples showcase the responsive­ness, consistenc­y and multisecto­ral capability of our approach, which we believe represents a promising direction for the climate impact modeling community,” said Sergey Paltsev, a coauthor of the study and deputy director of the MIT Joint Program, as well as a senior research scientist at the MIT Energy Initiative and the MIT Center for Energy and Environmen­tal Policy Research.

“Unlike traditiona­l IAMS and MIPS, the improved coupled human-earth system models like the IGSM framework enable researcher­s to design new emissions scenarios in a matter of months rather than years, avoid inconsiste­ncies among different model components and scenarios, and analyze multiple sectors all at once.”

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