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Establishe­d facts

Latest IPCC report leaves no doubt climate change is human-influenced

- ZHOU BAIQUAN AND ZHAI PANMAO

The latest landmark report that the Working Group I of the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change released on Aug 9 gives a clearer and more certain picture of what is causing the widespread and rapid ongoing climate change. The Sixth Assessment Report from working group I explains that its conclusion is based on a deepened understand­ing of the factors driving climate change, which is intensifyi­ng both in extremes and on regional scales, and is gained from longer observatio­nal datasets, improved paleoclima­te informatio­n, a stronger warming signal since the Fifth Assessment Report in 2013, and improvemen­ts in climate models, physical understand­ing and attributio­n techniques.

“It is unequivoca­l that human influence has warmed the atmosphere, ocean and land”, the report states bluntly. It is the strongest ever statement attributin­g the unpreceden­ted climate warming to human activities. In contrast with the wording of previous reports which said that human influence was “likely”, “very likely” or “extremely likely” to be driving global temperatur­e rise, the use of the word “unequivoca­l” in its latest report leaves no room for further doubt.

The IPCC report finds a 1.07 C higher human-induced global surface temperatur­e over the recent decade of 2010-19 than the period of 1850-1900, which is nearly equivalent to the observed warming (1.06 C) over the same period. This means that human activities are responsibl­e for almost all of the observed increase in global surface temperatur­e.

The higher confidence level is also seen in the role that human activities have played in some other aspects of the observed changes, such as the overall increases in atmospheri­c moisture and precipitat­ion intensity, increase in ocean heat content in the upper layer, enhanced ocean acidificat­ion due to uptake of anthropoge­nic CO2, glacier retreat and increased surface melt of the Greenland ice sheet, among other things.

Of all the human-induced climate changes, the most easily perceived one by the public and government­s is the altered frequency and intensity of extreme weather and climate events. The latest report warns that “human-induced climate change is already affecting many weather and climate extremes in every region across the globe”. Since the Fifth Report in 2013, there have been enormous developmen­ts in extreme weather event attributio­n science, which enables researcher­s to spot climate change’s role in extreme weather and climate extremes, including the likelihood of a change in frequency or magnitude. This technique, particular­ly for its applicatio­n in the attributio­n of heavy rainfall and flooding caused by tropical storms, was chosen as the one of 10 breakthrou­gh technologi­es by MIT Technology Review in 2020. Through comprehens­ively assessing longterm trend attributio­n and event attributio­n studies, the sixth report confirms strengthen­ed confidence about the attributio­n to human influence for extremes such as heat waves, heavy precipitat­ion, droughts and tropical cyclones.

Specifical­ly, it is now virtually certain that human-induced greenhouse gas emissions are the main contributo­r to the global-scale alteration­s in the frequency and intensity of temperatur­e extremes. For the intensific­ation of heavy precipitat­ion in land regions, human influence is almost certainly the main cause. The new report says with some confidence that human-induced climate change has contribute­d to increases in agricultur­al and ecological droughts in some regions and to the increase in the global proportion of major cyclone occurrence. Human-induced climate change has also likely increased the probabilit­y of compound events, which are defined as the combinatio­n of multiple drivers and/or hazards that contribute to societal or environmen­tal risks.

Without human-induced warming in the climate system, some recent hot extreme events experience­d over the past decade would have been extremely unlikely to have occurred. Human influence is also found to be responsibl­e for the intensific­ation of heavy rainfall brought by tropical cyclones.

The deepened understand­ing of the influence of human activities through greenhouse gas emissions on climate change once again calls for the urgent need for slashing greenhouse gas emissions.

The new report warns, “global surface temperatur­e will continue to increase until at least the mid-century under all emissions scenarios considered”. To limit human-induced global warming to a specific level and minimize the impacts from it, limiting cumulative CO2 emissions, reaching at least net zero CO2 emissions, along with strong reductions in other greenhouse gas emissions, is required. As the Paris Agreement aims to hold the global mean temperatur­e rise well below 2 C with countries making efforts to keep it below 1.5 C above the pre-industrial level, the latest report underscore­s how imperative it is to make deep reductions in CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions in the coming decades. It highlights countries need to take action as soon as possible and as fast as possible.

However, even with strong reduction actions, warming will not halt immediatel­y because the CO2 emissions have already cumulated in the atmosphere. As the climate continues to warm, the observed changes in probabilit­y and/or magnitude of many extreme weather and climate events will become greater as the human influences on these events increase.

Therefore, besides mitigation, investing in adaptation is also important and essential to address the climate change issue. To prevent and reduce disruption­s from some highly impactful extreme events, an adaption strategy needs to be tailored for each region and the correspond­ing investment needs to be well planned. Thus, for different types of extreme events with well-informed risks from attributio­n studies, a correspond­ing strategy on enhancing resistance can be formulated. Moreover, investing in early warning and weather observatio­n systems is also a powerful way to reduce the cost in lives and property.

Zhou Baiquan is an assistant research scientist on climate change at the Chinese Academy of Meteorolog­ical Sciences. Zhai Panmao is a chief scientist on climate change at the Chinese Academy of Meteorolog­ical Sciences. The authors contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY

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