Global
warming: Top scientists meet in Paris
AFP/File
Graphic showing how the earth is gradually becoming warmer. The world's
top climate experts were geared for a four-day meeting in Paris where
they are set to launch a long-awaited update about the scientific evidence
for global warming.
AFP
PARIS
Petroleumworld.com 01 29 06
The world's top climate experts were geared for a four-day meeting beginning
Monday in Paris where they are set to launch a long-awaited update about
the scientific evidence for global warming.
The report, to be released on Friday after the conclusion of the meeting,
is the first by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
since 2001 and the fourth since the body was launched in 1988.
The IPCC's reports are highly regarded for their neutrality and caution,
and they wield a big influence over government policies, corporate strategies
and even individual decision-making.
In 2001, the IPCC declared that carbon pollution from burning oil, gas
and coal had helped drive atmospheric levels of CO2 to their highest
in 420,000 years.
CO2 is the principal "greenhouse gas," a term that applies
to half a dozen gases that linger invisibly in the atmosphere, trapping
the Sun's heat instead of letting solar radiation bounce back into space.
Over the previous 50 years, temperatures climbed by around 0.1 C (0.2
F) per decade and most of the warming could be attributed to Man, the
2001 report said.
It predicted that by 2100, the global atmospheric temperature will have
risen between 1.4 and 5.8 C (2.52-10.4 F) and sea levels by 0.09 to
0.88 metres (3.5-35 inches), depending on how much greenhouse gas is
emitted.
Basing their judgement on a mountain of climate studies that have been
published since then, the experts are expected to fine-tune these two
range estimates.
The British daily The Independent reported Monday that a draft of the
report that it saw forecast temperature increases of between 2.0 and
4.5 C (3.6 and 8.1 F) as highly likely this century, but that gains
of 6.0 C (10.8 F) or more cannot be ruled out.
The scientists are also expected to point to fresh evidence that change
is already happening and could accelerate.
Recent signs of damage to the climate system have been shrinking glaciers
and snow cover in high mountains, a retreat of the North Pole's sea
ice in summer and acidification of the seas caused by absorption of
atmospheric CO2.
"Anthropogenic (man-made) warming of the climate system is widespread
and can be detected in temperature observations taken at the surface,
in the free atmosphere and in the oceans," said the draft of the
report seen by The Independent.
The report is agreed by consensus among the some 500 scientists and
government representatives in the IPCC's Working Group 1.
Two other volumes will be issued in April in what will be the fourth
assessment report on climate change by the IPCC since it was established
in 1988. The two others will focus on the impacts of climate change
and on the social-economic costs of reducing greenhouse gases.
AFP
29 0501 GMT 01 07
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