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Communicating Climate Change Science (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change)

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Title: Communicating Climate Change Science (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change)


1
Communicating Climate Change Science(Intergovernm
ental Panel on Climate Change)
Tim Killeen Director, National Center for
Atmospheric Research President, American
Geophysical Union AGI Geoscience Leadership
Forum 30 April 2007
2
National Center for Atmospheric Research
  • National Science Foundation funded Center, gt1,000
    Scientists and engineers, 48 year history
  • Earth System Sciences Computational and
    Observational Science and facilities for Weather,
    Climate, Chemistry, Space Weather,
    Society-Environment Interactions

American Geophysical Union
  • Worlds largest Geophysics Society (gt49,900
    members, 20 students, 130 countries)
  • Interdisciplinary science for the atmospheric and
    ocean sciences solid-Earth sciences hydrologic
    sciences and space science

3
AGU Mission AGU Council, 2005EOS, Vol. 86, No.
23, 219, 2005
  • AGU is a worldwide scientific community that
    advances, through unselfish cooperation in
    research, the understanding of Earth and space
    for the benefit of humanity.
  • AGU is advancing the Earth and space sciences by
    catalyzing and supporting the efforts of
    individual scientists within and outside the
    membership. We are organizing and disseminating
    information for the scientific community. As a
    learned society we meet our obligation to serve
    the public good by fostering quality in the Earth
    and space sciences and bringing the results of
    research to the public. These efforts are
    yielding greater numbers and diversity of
    well-educated students and young professionals in
    the Earth and space sciences, and are increasing
    the public's understanding and appreciation of
    the value of science and support for it.

4
The Two Cultures
  • What scientists say
  • 90 of scientists think few members of the press
    understand the nature of science and technology
  • 66 said most press members have no idea how to
    interpret scientific results
  • 69 said most reporters have no understanding of
    scientific method
  • More than 50 have had a bad experience
  • What journalists say
  • 85 of reporters think scientists are somewhat or
    not at all accessible
  • 62 think scientists are so intellectual or
    immersed in their jargon that they cannot
    communicate

Results from survey, used in NCAR media training,
2007
5
NCAR ScientistsInvolved in IPCCWorking Group I
6
AGUs Climate Statements
  • 1998 (reaffirmed in 2002)
  • AGU believes that the present level of scientific
    uncertainty does not justify inaction in the
    mitigation of human-induced climate change and/or
    the adaptation to it.
  • 2003The global climate is changing and human
    activities are contributing to that change.
  • 2007
  • Planned

7
The Challenge of Simulating the Global Earth
System
Atmosphere
Hydrosphere
Cryosphere
Biosphere
8
The Earth System
From Andi Andreae
9
(No Transcript)
10
CCSM Working Groups
11
Need for High Resolution
12
Science Driven Demand for Supercomputing
13
Modern Climate Model Simulations
  • NCARs Bluesky Supercomputer
  • 1600 Processors
  • Peak speed 8.3 Teraflops
  • Characteristics of NCAR Model
  • 1 quadrillion operations/simulated year
  • UN IPCC 10,800 years simulated
  • Rate of simulation 3.5 sim. years/day
  • Output 10 GB/simulated year
  • Data volume for IPCC 110 TB (200,000 Data
    CDs)
  • Development effort 1 person-century

14
Community Climate System Model and the IPCC
15
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
Fourth Assessment Report
  • NCAR Community Climate System Model (CCSM-3).
  • Open Source
  • 8-member ensembles
  • 11,000 model years simulated
  • T85 - high resolution

16
IPCC 2007 Summary for Policymakers
  • Higher confidence in projected patterns of
    warming and regional-scale features, continuing
    currently observed trends
  • warming greatest over land and at most high
    northern latitudes (least over Southern Ocean and
    parts of NA ocean)
  • snow cover will contract
  • widespread increases in thaw depth over most
    permafrost regions
  • sea ice will shrink in both Arctic and Antarctic,
    in some projections late summer sea ice
    disappears in the Arctic by latter part of 21st
    century
  • very likely that hot extremes, heat waves, and
    heavy precipitation events will continue to
    become more frequent
  • likely that typhoons and hurricanes will become
    more intense
  • extra-tropical storm tracks will move poleward
  • precipitation at high latitude very likely to
    increase, while decreases are likely in most
    subtropical land regions
  • Very likely that meridional overturning
    circulation of the Atlantic Ocean will slow down
    during the 21st century. Average reduction by
    2100 is 25 (0-50). Very abrupt transition is
    very unlikely in 21st century.
  • Anthropogenic warming and sea level rise will
    continue for centuries due to the timescales
    associated with climate processes and feedbacks,
    even if greenhouse gas concentrations were
    stabilized

17
So, how best to communicate?(some results)
18
Tony Blair
  • What is now plain is that the emission of
    greenhouse gasesis causing global warming at a
    rate that began as significant, and is simply
    unsustainable in the long-term. And by long-term
    I do not mean centuries ahead, I mean within the
    lifetime of my children certainly and possibly
    within my own. And by unsustainable I do not mean
    a phenomenon causing problems of adjustment. I
    mean a challenge so far-reaching in its impact
    and irreversible in its destructive power, that
    it alters radically human existence.

19
A lifetime of climate change
NASA
20
Global mean temperatures are rising faster with
time
Period Rate Years ?/decade
21
Time Scales in the Climate System
22
Probabilistic Outcomes
Wigley
23
Ann avg 1980-1999 ice thickness
Simulated late 20th century ice conditions
IPCC AR4 DashMarch extent WhiteObs Extent
24
Abrupt Ice Retreat Could Produce Ice-Free Arctic
Summers by 2040
  • Recent retreat of Arctic sea ice is likely to
    accelerate so rapidly that Arctic Ocean devoid of
    ice during summertime as early as 2040
  • Study by Marika Holland and teams from University
    of Washington, and McGill University
  • Several reasons for the abrupt Ice loss in a
    gradually warming world.
  • Positive Feedback
  • As the ice retreats, the ocean transports more
    heat to the Arctic and the open water absorbs
    more sunlight, further accelerating the rate of
    warming and leading to the loss of more ice

Ice Retreat Animation
25
Projections of Degradation of Near-Surface
Permafrost
Lawrence and Slater, 2005
26
Future changes in frost days from the climate
model show greatest decreases in the western and
southwestern U.S., similar to late 20th century
27
Changes in snowpacks/ timing of runoff have
occurred will continue
Observed streamflow timing changes (Center of
mass)
Trends are projected to continue through the 21st
Century with increased winter flood risks
lower summer low-flows in many rivers.
Observed 1948-2002
Large circles indicate sites with trends that
differ significantly from zero at a 90
confidence level (Courtesy of Michael
Dettinger USGS, based on Stewart et al. 2005.)
28
Ozone Recovery in the 21st Century
Global Average Total Ozone Column
Ozone (Dobson Units)
29
National Security and the Threat of Climate Change
  • CNA Corporation, 2007
  • National security consequences of climate change
    should be fully integrated into national security
    and national defense strategies
  • US should commit to a stronger national and
    international role to help stabilize climate
    changes at levels that will avoid significant
    disruption to global security and stability
  • U.S. should commit to global partnerships that
    help less developed nations build the capacity
    and resiliency to better manage climate impacts
  • DoD should enhance its operational capability
    through energy efficiency
  • DoD should conduct an assessment of the impact on
    U.S. military installations world-wide of rising
    sea levels, extreme weather events, and other
    possible climate change impacts over the next 30
    to 40 years.

30
National Security and the Threat of Climate Change
  • CNA Corporation, 2007
  • There is no known natural forcing that can
    account for the severity of the recent warming.
    For example, while claims are made that the
    variation in the intensity of the Sun is
    responsible, the solar radiations effect on the
    climate is estimated to be less than 5 as strong
    as that of human-induced greenhouse gases.
  • Precipitation patterns have changed
  • Extreme weather events are more frequent and Ice
    and snow cover is disappearing
  • Oceans are warming
  • Sea levels are rising
  • Ocean salinity has changed

31
(No Transcript)
32
Lessons Learned
Large efforts to develop comprehensive scientific
viewpoints can be extremely significant in
influencing public debate The key question
what do we do about climate change? is much
less well addressed than the scientific case for
climate change itself. Issues of timescales,
rates, greenhouse effect, and uncertainty all
need careful treatment. The propensity of the
media to describe arguments continues to lead to
public confusion. Responsibly informing societal
decision makers with the best available science
is tough for individuals trained as
scientists. Bottom line The IPCC Fourth
Assessment Report is currently the most
comprehensive assessment of the scientific
literature on climate change, and effectively and
accurately communicates to policymakers and the
public the state of human knowledge on this
topic.
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