Effects of emission cuts on climate change 'may take decades'

/ News & Interviews / Wednesday, 08 July 2020 13:20

Slashing greenhouse gas emissions would probably not yield visible results until mid-century, researchers have said, cautioning that humanity must manage its expectations in the fight against global warming.

Researchers in Norway used computer simulations to analyze various scenarios that looked at the effects of rapid reductions in several types of greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon dioxide (CO2), methane and black carbon.

They found that although large-scale emission cuts are needed to achieve the global climate goals, it may take decades before the effects of the reductions on temperatures can be measured.

The researchers estimated that even for the most optimistic scenarios, it will take at least 15 years to establish the impact of emission cuts on global warming.

"We need to be patient," said lead author Bjorn Samset, a scientist at the Center for International Climate Research in Oslo, Norway.

"All reductions in warming emissions will lead to less heat being absorbed," he said.

"But for temperature, which is what we care about, it will take decades before we will be able to measure the effect."

Two factors will make it difficult to feel and measure a drop in Earth's surface temperature, if and when that happens. One is lag time.

Over the last half-century, human activity has loaded the atmosphere with more than a trillion tonnes of planet-warming CO2, a gas that lingers for hundreds of years.

"Human-induced climate change can be compared with an ocean tanker at high speed in big waves," said Samset.

"You can put the engine in reverse, but it will take some time before you start noticing that the ship is moving more slowly."

The second factor is natural variability.

Over the last half-century the planet has warmed 0.2 degrees Celsius every decade, mainly due to the burning of fossil fuels.

"But from one year to the next, there are also large variations on a similar scale," said Samset, comparing them to waves rocking the ship back and forth.

In their study, Samset and colleagues projected the impact of reducing the two main greenhouse gases, CO2 and methane, as well as soot, sometimes called "black carbon".

On a 100-year timescale, methane is about 28 times more potent than CO2. Its main manmade sources are livestock, agriculture, and leaks from the natural gas industry.

Produced mostly by burning fossil fuels, CO2 accounts for more than three-quarters of global warming. Even with rapid cuts in these gases, it will be nearly impossible to detect a clear impact on global warming before 2035, the researchers said.

In a more realistic scenario, "these efforts could all be visible by mid-century, but not before", the study concluded.

"The study reinforces our understanding that climate change is a long-term problem that will not simply disappear if all human-related emissions stopped tomorrow," said Grant Allen, a professor of atmospheric physics at the University of Manchester.

"There is no quick fix."

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