[Global temperatures could exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius above their
preindustrial levels within the next 15 years, according to a new
scientific study, crossing the first threshold under the Paris climate
agreement and placing the world at a potentially dangerous level of
climate change.
The report comes as climate agreement participants are watching the
United States — where the Trump administration is debating whether to
withdraw from the Paris accord — and as scientists with the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change are working on a special
report about the 1.5-degree goal (equivalent to 2.7 degrees
Fahrenheit) and the consequences of overshooting it.]

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2017/05/09/earth-could-break-through-a-major-climate-threshold-in-the-next-15-years-scientists-warn/?hpid=hp_hp-more-top-stories_ee-climate-535pm%3Ahomepage%2Fstory&utm_term=.436b696963f7

Energy and Environment

Earth could break through a major climate threshold in the next 15
years, scientists warn

By Chelsea Harvey May 9 at 1:10 PM

Global temperatures could exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius above their
preindustrial levels within the next 15 years, according to a new
scientific study, crossing the first threshold under the Paris climate
agreement and placing the world at a potentially dangerous level of
climate change.

The report comes as climate agreement participants are watching the
United States — where the Trump administration is debating whether to
withdraw from the Paris accord — and as scientists with the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change are working on a special
report about the 1.5-degree goal (equivalent to 2.7 degrees
Fahrenheit) and the consequences of overshooting it.

That IPCC’s upcoming special report and the increasing urgency about
minimizing global warming were one impetus for the study, according to
co-author Benjamin Henley, a research fellow at the University of
Melbourne in Australia. “We are working on a number of scientific
avenues to help inform that report,” he told The Washington Post.

[‘We all knew this was coming’: Alaska’s thawing soils are now pouring
carbon dioxide into the air]

The study focuses on a natural planetary system known as the
Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation, or IPO (it’s also sometimes referred
to as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation). It’s an alternating pattern of
ocean temperatures that shifts periodically between warm and cool
phases, helping to drive temperature and weather patterns all over the
world.

During cool, or “negative,” phases, tropical regions of the Pacific
Ocean tend to be colder, and the global mean temperature is lower. The
system is similar to the El Niño/La Niña cycle, the major difference
being that phases of the IPO tend to last much longer — sometimes a
decade or more. The phenomenon is believed to be a natural form of
climate variability unrelated to human-caused climate change, although
it does have the potential to influence the progression of global
warming.

For most of the 2000s, the IPO has been in a negative phase, and
scientists think its cooling effect has helped to slightly offset the
effect of climate change, an explanation for the so-called global
warming pause in the first part of the 21st century. As multiple
studies have pointed out, this temporary slowdown is consistent with
the overall long-term warming trend and in no way suggests that
human-induced climate change is not occurring. Rather, this natural
variation in the global climate helped to slightly blunt those
effects.

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Researchers say 2015 was the hottest year on record, and that it
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explains what that could mean for weather patterns, the Paris climate
deal and 2016. (Gillian Brockell, Chris Mooney/TWP)
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as soon as Wednesday]

Many scientists believe that the planet is now transitioning back into
a positive, or warm, phase, which could amplify, rather than offset,
human-caused climate warming. This means we could reach milestone
temperature thresholds faster than we would if the IPO had remained in
its negative phase.

That’s the conclusion of the new study, written by Henley and Andrew
King of the University of Melbourne. Using model projections of future
climate warming under a business-as-usual scenario, they suggest that
the Earth could hit the 1.5-degree temperature threshold as early as
2025, while the continuation of the negative phase probably would
delay this event until after 2030.

The exact difference in timing depends on how we define the milestone
itself, the researchers point out. We could say we’ve hit the
threshold the first year the global mean temperature is 1.5 degrees
warmer than it was during the preindustrial era, regardless of how the
temperature fluctuates after that point. Or we could say it has
happened when the mean temperature meets this point over the course of
a five-year period or longer. Or, because global mean temperature
tends to wiggle up and down a bit from one year to the next, we could
say it’s the point at which we cross the 1.5-degree threshold and
never dip below it again.

[Pipeline spill by Dakota Access company could have a ‘deadly effect’]

The scientists explored all but the last scenario in their paper and
found that the projected year for crossing the 1.5-degree threshold
varied slightly among them. Generally, however, the models suggested
it would occur between 2025 and 2029 (most likely around 2026) if the
IPO shifts to a positive phase, and around 2031 if it stays in a
negative phase. (They were not able to investigate the final scenario,
they noted, because it probably will occur much further in the future
and the number of IPO phases humans have observed since detailed
record-keeping began is not sufficient to inform the model simulations
required.)

“The paper emphasizes the way that natural climate variations, like
the IPO, can interact with the progression of human-caused global
warming,” Gerald Meehl, a senior scientist with the National Center
for Atmospheric Research, told The Washington Post. “Therefore, the
timing of when we cross certain thresholds depends on the interplay
between these two factors.” Meehl was not involved with the new study
but has previously published research on the IPO.

And the 2025 date for hitting the 1.5-degree temperature threshold is
looking more and more likely. Multiple studies in the past few years
suggest that the transition to a positive IPO phase has  begun. Henley
said there’s some uncertainty about whether that has happened, but
other scientists are more confident. Scientists John Fasullo and Kevin
Trenberth, also of the National Center for Atmospheric Research, have
published research to this effect, and both told The Post that we have
been in a positive phase for several years now.

[The EPA just buried its climate change website for kids]

In fact, Trenberth and Fasullo suggested that the paper’s conclusions
have been generally known for some time. They also pointed out that
the study has its limitations. Fasullo suggested that the various
reasons given for the 1.5-degree temperature threshold are “deficient”
for precisely the reason that they’re sensitive to climate variations
such as the IPO.

Trenberth said that the 1.5 degrees — as a single, concrete number —
is “pretty irrelevant.” He noted that “it is all of the other things
going on when that stage is reached that really matter: the heat
waves, wildfires, droughts, extreme rainfalls, etc.”

It’s also unclear, for now, how significant the difference between a
positive and negative IPO really is in terms of what the planet would
look like under either scenario. The timing difference for hitting the
1.5-degree target is only about five years. At the point when a
positive IPO would cause us to cross the threshold, the researchers
note that the global temperature under a negative IPO would probably
be about 0.2 degrees Celsius cooler. Whether there would be a
significant difference in the actual climate effects produced under
these different mean temperatures is uncertain.

[The EPA climate website taken down for review was accurate, scientists say]
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