[*Will the new IPCC synthesis report help? It won't convert climate change
skeptics or change national negotiating positions, said Robert Stavins
<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/fs/rstavins/>, an environmental economist at
Harvard University and a lead author of the report.*

*"Rather than changing people's minds, it serves as ammunition, with which
they can support their previously established positions," said Stavins.
"That doesn't mean it's not relevant, because it requires ammunition to win
a battle."*

(The complete report is available at <
http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar5/syr/SYR_AR5_LONGERREPORT.pdf
>.)]

I/II.
http://news.sciencemag.org/climate/2014/11/ipcc-reaches-finish-line-releases-major-climate-change-synthesis-report

IPCC

Rajendra Pachauri (right), chairman of the IPCC, addresses the Copenhagen
meeting.
IPCC reaches finish line, releases major climate change synthesis report
David is a Deputy News Editor specializing in coverage of science policy,
energy and the environment.

By
David Malakoff <http://news.sciencemag.org/author/david-malakoff>
2 November 2014 8:30 am

Climate change is taking hold and will bring worrying impacts - but there
is still time to limit the damage. That, in a nutshell, is the message
delivered by a new report that synthesizes the findings of three massive
studies issued by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) over
the past year. The *Synthesis Report <http://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar5/syr/>*,
released today at a meeting in Copenhagen, caps work on the fifth
assessment of climate science and mitigation that the IPCC has completed
since 1990.

The report demonstrates that "we have the means to limit climate change,"
said Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC, in a statement. "The
solutions are many and allow for continued economic and human development.
All we need is the will to change, which we trust will be motivated by
knowledge and an understanding of the science of climate change."

The synthesis report wraps together highlights from the three earlier
reports, on:

   - climate science, released in September 2013;
   
<http://news.sciencemag.org/climate/2013/09/climate-panel-even-greater-confidence-looming-warming>
   - potential climate impacts, and ways to adapt and reduced vulnerability
   
<http://news.sciencemag.org/climate/2014/03/major-climate-report-describes-changing-world-striving-adapt>,
   released in March 2014; and
   - strategies to mitigate climate impacts
   
<http://news.sciencemag.org/climate/2014/04/ipcc-mitigating-climate-change-more-challenging-ever>,
   released in April 2014.

It is the product of a sometimes contentious negotiating process
<http://news.sciencemag.org/climate/2014/04/scientists-licking-wounds-after-contentious-climate-report-negotiations>
over wording and emphasis, and draws on the work of more than 800
scientists.  The report is designed to make state-of-the-art thinking about
climate change available to policy makers and the public.

Although the new report's "core findings aren't new, [it] makes them
clearer than ever, and they are worth underscoring," said Bob Perciasepe,
president of the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Climate and Energy
Solutions, in a statement. "The core message from the IPCC is the growing
urgency of action... The scientists have done their job. Now it's up to
governments to do theirs."

In particular, advocates for government action on climate change are
focusing on a new round of international negotiations on some kind global
climate pact. In December, nations meet in Peru to talk over some options,
with the goal of arriving at a final agreement at a meeting in Paris in
December 2015. It's unclear, however, whether the new IPCC report can help
overcome the political and economic obstacles that have blocked major
movement of reducing emissions.

Posted in Climate <http://news.sciencemag.org/category/climate>
II.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/11/141102-ipcc-synthesis-report-climate-change-science-environment/
5 Key Takeaways From the Latest Climate Change Report The Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change calls for a dramatic shift from fossil fuels,
aiming to influence world leaders to take concrete steps.

A high-efficiency coal-fired power station stands in Germany, which has
made a dedicated effort to transition to clean energy but, like many
nations around the world, still depends heavily on coal for electricity.

Photograph by Martin Meissner, AP

By Elizabeth Shogren

for National Geographic <http://news.nationalgeographic.com>

Published November 2, 2014

*The latest report from the main international panel charged with assessing
climate change, released today in Copenhagen, shouts the same basic message
scientists have been telling governments for decades.*

Protecting the planet will require a dramatic shift away from fossil fuels,
the report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emphasizes.

The release was timed for political impact, arriving weeks before
international negotiators meet in Lima, Peru, to start forging a new
strategy on climate change.

"Science has spoken. There is no ambiguity in their message," United
Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a news conference
<http://www.un.org/sg/> this morning in Copenhagen. "Leaders must act; time
is not on our side."

The Fifth Assessment Synthesis Report, as it's called, pulls together the
conclusions of three IPCC working groups, which issued reports over the
past year on the underlying science
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2013/13/130927-ipcc-report-released-climate-change-global-warming-intergovernmental-panel-on-climate-change/>,
the impacts
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/03/140331-ipcc-report-global-warming-climate-change-science/>,
and the ways to address
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/14/140413-ipcc-climate-change-report-un-science/>
climate change.

Prepared by hundreds of scientists from around the globe, it's a statement
of the scientific consensus aimed at the people in government who might do
something about climate change.

"To avoid the chaos of runaway climate change, we know that we need to
dramatically reduce global emissions of greenhouse gases," Rajendra Pachauri
<http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/press/briefcv_pachauri.pdf>, the panel's chairman,
said at the news conference.

Here are a few takeaways:

*1. Evidence that Humans Are Causing It Is Stronger.*

It's "extremely likely," the report says, that human influence, primarily
the burning of fossil fuels, has been the dominant cause of global warming
over the past several decades. That's stronger language than the previous
version
<http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/publications_ipcc_fourth_assessment_report_synthesis_report.htm>
of this report, released in 2007, which concluded that it was merely "very
likely." In the oddly precise IPCC lingo, that one-word change stems from a
5 percentage point increase in scientific certainty, from 90 to 95 percent.

*2. The Forecast for 2100 Is . . . Challenging.*

If the direness of the forecast could be measured as precisely as its
certainty, you'd probably have to say that it has increased by more than 5
percentage points since 2007. Without urgent action to slash greenhouse gas
emissions, the new report says, "warming by the end of the 21st century
will lead to high to very high risk of severe, widespread, and irreversible
impacts globally."

There was nothing quite like that statement the last time around.

An example of an "irreversible impact" would be passing the point of no
return for the West Antarctic Ice Sheet--the point beyond which all we can
do is hope its collapse into the sea, and the resulting 10- to 13-foot (3-
to 4-meter) rise in sea level, will be slow. Some scientists think that at
least some parts of the ice sheet already have begun to collapse
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/05/140512-thwaites-glacier-melting-collapse-west-antarctica-ice-warming/>
.

Another kind of irreversible impact would be extinction of plants or
animals. "A large fraction of species faces increased extinction risk due
to climate change" during this century and beyond, the new report says.

*3. It's Happening Now.*

Compared to the 2007 assessment, the report includes stronger evidence of
the many ways the planet is already experiencing the effects of
human-caused climate change--sea-level rise, shrinking glaciers, decreasing
snow and ice cover, warmer oceans and more frequent and intense extreme
weather events, such as heat waves in Europe, Asia, and Africa, and heavier
rain- and snowstorms in North America and Europe.

If the litany sounds familiar, that's because it is.

"It's just a bit firmer version of the same diagnosis that was given seven
years ago," said Duke University climate scientist Drew Shindell
<http://nicholas.duke.edu/people/faculty/shindell>, who co-authored one of
the three working group reports. "The main problem is people didn't like
the prescription."

*4. What's Needed Now Is . . . Politics.*

Actually, politics enters into the production of the IPCC report itself.
Although it's a statement of scientific consensus, the crucial 40-page
"summary for policymakers" has to be approved by the policymakers
themselves. Over the last five long days in Copenhagen, the scientists and
representatives of the world's governments have been debating and editing
it line by line.

"Anything that's politically contentious gets stripped out of the summary
for policymakers," said David Victor
<http://irps.ucsd.edu/faculty/faculty-directory/david-victor.htm>,
professor of international relations at the University of California at San
Diego and an author of a working group report.

This year, for example, research showing the problems with the 1997 Kyoto
Protocol <http://unfccc.int/kyoto_protocol/items/2830.php> and why it
failed to achieve greater emissions reductions were included in the
scientists' report but did not make it into the summary.

"The diplomatic community would like to believe that what they've been
doing has had a bigger impact, so it would have been a kick in the pants,"
Victor said. "Because it would have been a kick in the pants is one of the
reasons it's not in there."

Also left out was a box that explained in one place how much temperature
increase would create the kind of dangerous climate change that world
leaders pledged to avoid in the only climate change treaty the United
States has signed, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change.

Michael Oppenheimer
<http://www.princeton.edu/step/people/faculty/michael-oppenheimer/>, a
Princeton geoscientist and lead author of one of the scientific reports,
called the omission a "disappointment." He pointed out that all the
information in the box is already elsewhere in the report, but now
policymakers will be forced to dig around to find it.

"I think it's a reflection of the difficulties countries have had agreeing
on what to do about the climate change problem," Oppenheimer said.

The science has long been clear enough.

"Every time the IPCC comes around, we have a crisper more worrisome set of
messages about the trends in emissions and impacts of climate change, and
then you don't see much connection between that story and what governments
actually do," Victor said. "That's because it's not really a scientific
problem anymore. Essentially, everything that needs to be done to move the
needle is political."

In 2009, on the heels of the previous IPCC report, the world's political
leaders took their last serious stab at moving the needle at another
conference in Copenhagen, where the latest IPCC report was just released.
Those talks collapsed like a melting ice sheet.

Since then greenhouse gas emissions have continued to rise on the same
trajectory, as have concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/09/140909-record-greenhouse-gases-carbon-sinks-global-warming-ocean/>
.

*5. But There's Still Paris.*

If "Copenhagen" has become a synonym for "debacle" in the community of
climate negotiators, "Paris" has become the glimmer of hope.

"I'm confident we can make it happen," Ban said about the prospect of a new
international climate pact. The IPCC operates under the auspices of the UN.

In six weeks, the negotiators will gather in
<http://unfccc.int/meetings/lima_dec_2014/meeting/8141.php> Peru. That
meeting is supposed to prepare the way for the conference in Paris in
December 2015, which aims to reach an agreement to replace the Kyoto
Protocol. Kyoto required developed countries to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions by specific amounts. It was a legally binding treaty--except that
it never bound the United States, then the largest emitter, which never
ratified it. And it never bound China, now the largest emitter, because all
developing countries were exempt.

The argument between developed and developing countries--about who should do
how much to "mitigate" climate change through reduced emissions--has always
been one of the main obstacles to an agreement that actually makes a
difference. But the chasm is less deep than it used to be, said Laurence
Tubiana <http://unsdsn.org/about-us/people/laurence-tubiana/>, the French
diplomat charged with organizing the Paris conference.

"All countries, including less developed countries, are saying their
contribution will have a mitigation part," Tubiana said on a visit to
Washington last month. "Even Mali will have emissions reductions. That's
really unprecedented."

Developed countries, for their part, might start delivering soon on their
commitment to create a Green Climate Fund
<http://unfccc.int/cooperation_and_support/financial_mechanism/green_climate_fund/items/5869.php>
to help less developed countries. France and Germany each have pledged $1
billion to the fund, which has a staff and a headquarters outside Seoul. At
a meeting in Berlin this month, other countries are expected to step up to
the plate.

So much for signs of hope. They're small compared with the task. At
Copenhagen in 2009, while the negotiators were failing to agree on measures
to stop climate change, they did at least agree on a target: The global
average temperature should not be allowed to rise more than 2°C (3.6°F)
above preindustrial levels.

The 2°C target has been criticized lately
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/03/141001-two-degrees-global-warming-climate-science/>,
including by Victor. But to Tubiana, "it's just crazy" to talk about
abandoning that target. "We'll be very strong on this-2 degrees should be
the anchor," she added.

To keep warming below 2°C, according to the new IPCC report, the world will
have to cut greenhouse gas emissions between 40 and 70 percent by 2050--and
then keep cutting until they're essentially zero by 2100.

Coal and natural gas would need to be phased out for electricity use,
unless technologies are developed to capture and store the carbon dioxide
they emit.

The report says transforming the global energy industry will be
affordable-at a cost of about 0.06 percent of global consumption growth per
year-if actions are taken soon.

"The costs will go up enormously if we keep delaying things," said Pachauri
<http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/press/briefcv_pachauri.pdf>. "The cost of inaction
will be horrendously higher than the cost of action."*
<http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/press/briefcv_pachauri.pdf>*

There's no consensus
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/09/1409021-united-nations-climate-change-summit-treaty/>
on what type of agreement might accomplish that, except that it's not
likely to be a legally binding treaty that commits each country to specific
emissions cuts. In a talk at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think
tank, Tubiana spoke of a possible Paris agreement in carefully fluid terms.

"What does it mean, Paris?" she said. "It means sending a very strong
signal to the business sector," the way the U.S. Federal Reserve does when
it adjusts interest rates. Negotiators in Paris, Tubiana said, will "have
to create a self-fulfilling prophecy that the low-carbon economy is
happening . . . How we produce the signal is the challenge of Paris."

Will the new IPCC synthesis report help? It won't convert climate change
skeptics or change national negotiating positions, said Robert Stavins
<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/fs/rstavins/>, an environmental economist at
Harvard University and a lead author of the report.

"Rather than changing people's minds, it serves as ammunition, with which
they can support their previously established positions," said Stavins.
"That doesn't mean it's not relevant, because it requires ammunition to win
a battle."

"There's enormous fatigue with this," Tubiana said. "Everybody is fed up.
We have to deliver now."

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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