Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Warming can’t be limited without drastic changes

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Hot extremes, humid heat stress, sea-level rise and tropical cyclones. This is what is in store for India at 1.5°C global warming, according to an IPCC report. In an email interview to HT, Swapna Panickal, climate scientist and co-author of the report said without large-scale reduction in global greenhouse emissions, even the 2°C warming threshold will be exceeded. Edited excerpts

What are the climate change impacts already documented in India?

The South and Southeast Asian monsoon has weakened in the second half of the 20th century. Heat extremes have increased while cold extremes have decreased, and these trends will continue. The surface Indian Ocean has warmed faster than the global average. As a result, sea level will continue to rise.

Which of these are irreversib­le?

The increase in ocean heat content and sea level rise are irreversib­le. Oceans will continue to warm. By 2050, sea level is expected to rise an additional 10–25 cm globally, whether or not greenhouse gas emissions are reduced. This is because sea level responds more slowly to changes in CO2 than other components of the climate system.

How will climate change impact our glaciers?

Snow cover has reduced since the early 21st century, and glaciers over the high mountain regions have thinned, retreated, and lost mass since the 1970s, although the Karakoram glaciers have either slightly gained mass or are in an approximat­ely balanced state. Rising temperatur­e and precipitat­ion can increase the occurrence of glacial lake outburst, floods and landslides over high mountain regions.

How will it affect the southwest monsoon?

Projected precipitat­ion changes in the near term (next 20-30 years) are uncertain due to natural variabilit­y, and this is an area of active research. Over South Asia, East Asia and West Africa, increases in monsoon precipitat­ion due to warming from GHG (green house gas) emissions were counteract­ed by decreases due to cooling from human-caused aerosol emissions over the 20th century, leading to a weakening of monsoon. But extreme rain events will rise.

How is tropical cyclone frequency and intensity likely to change?

The tropical cyclone intensity will increase; however, their genesis frequency will decrease or remain unchanged.

How do you think India should prepare for 1.5 degree to 2°C warm world?

Unless there are immediate, rapid and large-scale reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, limiting warming to close to 1.5 degree C or even 2 degree C will be beyond reach.

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