Temperatures Could Rise Far More Than Previously Thought If Fossil Fuel Reserves Burned

authordefault
on

Imagine a world where average temperatures are almost 10 degrees Celsius higher than today, an Arctic with temperatures almost 20 degrees warmer and some regions deluged with four times moreย rain.

That is the dramatic scenario predicted by a team of climate scientists led by the University of Victoriaโ€™s Katarzyna Tokarska, who looked at what would happen if the Earthโ€™s remaining untapped fossil fuel reserves areย burned.

Tokarska, a PhD student at UVicโ€™s School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, used simulations from climate models looking at the relationship between carbon emissions and warming โ€” including the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report โ€” and concluded that known fossil fuel reserves would emit the equivalent of five trillion tonnes of carbon emissions ifย burned.

That would result in average global temperature increases between 6.4 degrees and 9.5 degrees Celsius, with Arctic temperatures warming between 14.7 degrees and 19.5 degrees, says the paper published Monday in the scientific journal Nature Climate Change.

โ€œThese results indicate that the unregulated exploitation of the fossil fuel resource could ultimately result in considerably more profound climate changes than previously suggested,โ€ says theย study.

โ€œSuch climate changes, if realized, would have extremely profound impacts on ecosystems, human health, agriculture, economies and otherย sectors.โ€

Simulated changes in precipitation are โ€œextremely large,โ€ according to theย paper.

It predicts increases of more than a factor of four in areas such as the tropical Pacific and hefty decreases in precipitation over areas such as parts of Australia, the Mediterranean, southern Africa, the Amazon, Central America and Northย Africa.

Researchers used the lower boundary of estimates of known fossil fuels, Tokarska said in an interview with DeSmogย Canada.

โ€œThe (amount of untapped fossil fuels) could be much higher as we didnโ€™t consider unconventional sources, and then the warming would be much higher,โ€ Tokarskaย said.

The highest temperatures would be reached by the year 2200, but, in the meantime, temperatures will steadily increase unless mitigation measures are taken, the studyย finds.

โ€œSome people say that thatโ€™s so far off, but this is profound climate change if we follow the usual scenario,โ€ Tokarskaย said.

โ€œWhat we are doing is showing itโ€™s relevant to know what will happen if we donโ€™t take any action to mitigate climate change โ€” if we donโ€™t ever implement the Paris agreement or other such agreements. Itโ€™s a worst-case scenario if we donโ€™t do anything now,โ€ sheย said.

The Paris agreement, adopted in December last year, sets a target of limiting global warming to below two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 degrees โ€” a goal supported byย Canada.

Based on previous research, the Earth is already halfway towards the two -degree increase in temperature and researchers are now looking at whether it is possible to reach that tougher 1.5 degree target, but Tokarska said they do not yet have thoseย answers.

Worldwide there are growing calls for governments to enforce regulations to keep remaining fossil fuels in the ground and to speed up a move to greenย economies.

โ€œOn a personal level I can say this is kind of a warning message of the likely outcome so we can hopefully do some changes now,โ€ Tokarskaย said.

Other authors of the paper include Nathan Gillett and Vivek Arora from the Canadian Centre of Climate Modelling and Analysis and Michael Eby and Andrew Weaver from UVicโ€™s School of Earth and Ocean Sciences.

Weaver is also leader of the B.C. Greenย Party.

Photo: Wendy North via Flickr.

authordefault
Admin's short bio, lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Voluptate maxime officiis sed aliquam! Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit.

Related Posts

on

DeSmog has won two awards for its work exposing the role of the advertising and public relations industry in delaying climate action at the 2025 Covering Climate Now Journalism Awards. Investig...
on

For EU lawmakers to be talking with the โ€œworldโ€™s loudest climate deniersโ€ is a scandal, says Austrian Greens MEP Lena Schilling.

For EU lawmakers to be talking with the โ€œworldโ€™s loudest climate deniersโ€ is a scandal, says Austrian Greens MEP Lena Schilling.
on

The Animal Agriculture Alliance, which briefs the FBI, has tracked over 2,400 individuals linked to animal welfare and environmental groups.

The Animal Agriculture Alliance, which briefs the FBI, has tracked over 2,400 individuals linked to animal welfare and environmental groups.
on

U.S. โ€œcorporate titansโ€ are being allowed to build energy intensive data centres on British soil.

U.S. โ€œcorporate titansโ€ are being allowed to build energy intensive data centres on British soil.