The 2nd of February 2007 will one day hopefully be remembered as the day the
question mark was removed from the debate on whether human activities are
driving climate change, said the head of the UN Environment Programme at the
launch of the most authoritative scientific report on climate change to
date.

The new Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report says there is 90%
certainty that the burning of fossil fuels and other human activities are
driving climate change. Read the global reaction to the report
here.<http://environment.newscientist.com/article/dn11096>

"The word unequivocal is the key message of this report," said Achim
Steiner, executive director of UNEP, adding that those who have doubts about
the role of humans in driving the climate "can no longer ignore the
evidence".

The IPCC report says the rise in global temperatures could be as high as
6.4°C by 2100. The report also predicts sea level rises and increases in the
intensity of hurricanes. It is the work of 1200 climate experts from 40
countries, who have spent six years reviewing all the available climate
research. It was released in Paris, France, on Friday (read the 21-page
summary here, pdf
format<http://media.newscientist.com/data/images/ns/av/dn11088D1.pdf>).
Listen to audio from today's press
conference<http://www.empreinte.com/richmediaevent/20070202/vod/ipc_audio_en_900x540_WindowsLD.htm>
.

The last IPCC 
report<http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn443-global-warning.html>,
issued in 2001, predicted that temperatures would rise by 1.4°C to 5.8°C by
2100, relative to 1990 temperatures.

But the new report says temperature rises by 2100 could, in the most extreme
scenarios, range from 1.1°C and 6.4°C. The most likely range is 1.8°C to
4.0°C (see figure 1, right), with the report predicting that 4°C is most
likely if the world continues to burn fossil-fuels at the same rate (read
the *The impacts of rising global
temperatures*<http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/dn11089-the-impacts-of-rising-global-temperatures.html>).

Melting, moving ice

Rises in sea levels are predicted by the new report, threatening low-lying
areas of land around the world. As the oceans warm, their waters expand,
while rising temperatures also increase the melting of the ice sheets that
cover Greenland and Antarctica.

In 2001, the IPCC predicted that sea levels would rise by between 9 and 88
centimetres by 2100, relative to 1990 levels. The new report says rises
could range from 18 cm to 59 cm. The top end of the range corresponds to a
fossil-fuel intensive future (see A1F1 scenario in *Modelling the future
climate: the baseline
scenarios*<http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/dn11090-modelling-the-future-climate-the-baseline-scenarios.html>).


But predictions of sea level rise are one of the most contentious areas of
the report - very recent research has suggested that rises of up to 140 cm
are possible (see *Shorelines may be in greater peril than
thought*<http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/dn10799-shorelines-may-be-in-greater-peril-than-thought.html>).


The problem is that the understanding of how warming affects Greenland and
Antarctic ice sheets remains limited, and they are predicted to be the most
important contributors to change. Estimates of the straightforward melting
of ice are incorporated in the IPCC report. But warming may also accelerate
the movement of ice in glaciers into the ocean, perhaps by meltwater
lubricating the undersides of ice streams.

Susan Solomon, one of the report's lead authors, said there was no published
research that quantified this effect, and so it was not included. But she
added: "If temperatures exceed 1.9°C to 4.6°C above pre-industrial
temperatures, and were to be sustained for thousands of years, eventually we
would expect the Greenland ice sheet to melt. That would raise sea level by
7 metres."

Climate change is also expected to affect the frequency and strength of
tropical storms and hurricanes. The latest IPCC report says the activity of
tropical cyclones is "likely" to increase over the 21st century. It says
"likely" indicates a probability of more than 66%. This is a bolder
statement than the World Meteorology Organisation issued in
January<http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/dn10796-global-warming-link-to-hurricanes-likely-but-unproven.html>.


Precipitation patterns will change too by 2100, according to IPCC
predictions (see figure 2, right). Mid- to high-latitude regions will see up
to 20% more rain and snow, while the tropical regions will see less.
Humans to blame

Considering the human role in causing climate change, the IPCC report is
damning: "The understanding of [human] influences on climate has improved
since the [2001] report, leading to a very high confidence that human
activities" are responsible for most of the warming seen since 1950, says
the report's summary for policymakers. "Very high confidence" is described
as "at least a 9 out of 10 chance of being correct".

Before the industrial revolution, human greenhouse gas emissions were small,
and the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide – the main greenhouse
gas – was about 280 parts per million (ppm).

Thanks largely to the burning of fossil fuels and changes in land use, such
as agricultural exploitation and deforestation, the atmospheric
concentration of carbon dioxide reached 379 ppm in 2005, says the IPCC.
Gold standard

The IPCC draws together the world's leading climate experts to review and
assess all available research, under the auspices of UN Environment
Programme and the World Meteorology Organization.

The result of their assessment, which is done every five to six years,
establishes what is considered the gold standard of consensus on climate
change science.

The latest IPCC report was written by hundreds of experts and reviewed by
hundreds more, from 113 countries. It is being released in stages during
2007. The first chapter, released on Friday, deals with the scientific basis
for climate change.

The next two parts of the IPCC's 2007 assessment, plus a synthesis, will be
released throughout the year. Part 2, dealing with the impacts of climate
change and our vulnerability to those impacts, will be released in April.
Part 3, to be released in May, deals with how we might mitigate these
impacts.

*Climate Change - Want to know more about global warming – the science,
impacts and political debate? Visit our continually updated special
report<http://www.newscientist.com/channel/earth/climate-change>
*.

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