Three articles & reports

Michael Gove launches new Met office Projections  

Gove’s speech – a detailed statement

US Climate change report highlights massive costs not least to inland and coastal flooding

Committee on Climate Change Animation

1. The Environment Secretary, Michael Gove at the Science Museum in London, in which he launched new data giving the most detailed picture yet of temperature, rainfall and sea level rise over next century. Using the latest science from the Met Office and around the world, the UK Climate Projections 2018(UKCP18) illustrate a range of future climate scenarios until 2100 – showing increasing summer temperatures, more extreme weather and rising sea levels are all on the horizon, and that urgent international action is needed.

To help homes and businesses plan for the future, the results set out a range of possible outcomes over the next century based on different rates of greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere. The high emission scenario shows:

  • Summer temperatures could be up to 5.4C hotter by 2070, while winters could be up to 4.2C warmer
  • The chance of a summer as hot as 2018 is around 50% by 2050
  • Sea levels in London could rise by up to 1.15 metres by 2100
  • Average summer rainfall could decrease by up to 47 per cent by 2070, while there could be up to 35 per cent more precipitation in winter.

Speaking at the Science Museum, the Environment Secretary said:

As we launch the fourth generation of our UK Climate Projections, it is clear that the planet and its weather patterns are changing before our eyes. Sea levels, for example – which we are becoming more accurate at measuring, thanks to advances in instruments and monitoring systems. In the 20th century the oceans rose around 15cm and the rate of increase has since quickened. Just since 2000, levels have risen around six centimetres, based on a global-average rise of 3.2mm a year. Our seas are storing increasing amounts of heat: around half of all ocean warming has occurred since 1997. Even as we take action to slow carbon dioxide pollution now, physics dictates that the climate will keep heating up for decades to come.

Mr Gove went on to say that the UK is showing globe leadership in tackling Climate Change:

Since 1990 we have cut emissions by 42 per cent – faster than any other G7 nation – and our economy has grown by two-thirds. Tackling climate change is not a binary process which requires us to champion the planet over national prosperity.

During the speech, the Environment Secretary announced £13 million for mangroves restoration to support projects in small island states, highlighting their importance in climate mitigation. The Environment Secretary also announced a new strategy and taskforce to improve the condition of peatlands in England in 2019, and also laid out plans for a consultation on a new English Tree Strategy which will complement progress being made through Countryside Stewardship and the Woodland Carbon Guarantee scheme towards the target of planting 11 million new trees during the current Parliament.

With climate change a global challenge, for the first time, UKCP18 presents international projections, allowing other nations to use this data to gauge future risks for food supply chains, or check rainfall projections for the likelihood of localised flooding. Mr Gove praised the scientists involved in compiling the latest data sets, adding:

When it comes to climate change we now, thanks to the efforts of the UK’s scientists know more than ever before the urgency of acting. Which is why not just I, but future generations, are so much in the debt of scientists who work for a better future.

Click here to read more

2. The American Climate Change report – Trump tries to bury it because he doesn’t believe it … ‘ 

Guardian ‘The Trump administration published a major report on climate change the day after Thanksgiving. Donald Trump doesn’t believe his own government’s major report on climate change – which the administration tried to bury over the Thanksgiving break. It warns that rising temperatures are already harming America and will cause huge damage globally. The Guardian will explore key findings from the report each day this week.

Climate efforts aren’t all or nothing

Limiting greenhouse gases would substantially benefit the US economy and stop thousands of deaths each year, compared to allowing climate pollution to continue to rise through the 21st century.

Reaching a peak for climate pollution mid-century and then beginning a decline would prevent in 2090:

  • 48% of the $155bn per year in damages to labour
  • 58% of the $141bn per year in lives lost on extremely hot or cold days
  • 22% of the $118bn per year in damages to coastal property
  • 31% of the $26bn per year in the health consequences from poor air quality
  • 59% of the $20bn per year in damages to roads
  • 47% of the $8bn per year in inland flooding

The earth would continue to warm even if humans stopped producing greenhouse gases from power plants and cars today. But limiting – if not entirely eliminating – that pollution would substantially reduce risks. Cutting greenhouse gases would provide the biggest benefits in the later half of this century.

“In the absence of more significant global mitigation efforts, climate change is projected to impose substantial damages on the US economy, human health, and the environment,” the report says. “Under scenarios with high emissions and limited or no adaptation, annual losses in some sectors are estimated to grow to hundreds of billions of dollars by the end of the century. It is very likely that some physical and ecological impacts will be irreversible for thousands of years, while others will be permanent.” Click here to access the report 

3. Committee on Climate Change Animation   We are celebrating ten years of the #ClimateChangeAct, and ten years of the Committee on #ClimateChange! To mark the occasion, we’re launching a new #animation setting out some of the key achievements of the past decade and looking ahead to the next ten years. Take a look! pic.twitter.com/BGUYzNDhV

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