What's clear from Copenhagen is that policymakers have fallen behind the scientists: global warming is already catastrophic.
The more we know, the grimmer it gets.
Presentations by climate scientists at this week's conference in Copenhagen show that we might have underplayed the impacts of global warming in three important respects:
• Partly because the estimates by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) took no account of meltwater from Greenland's glaciers, the rise in sea levels this century could be twice or three times as great as it forecast, with grave implications for coastal cities, farmland and freshwater reserves.
• Two degrees of warming in the Arctic (which is heating up much more quickly than the rest of the planet) could trigger
a massive bacterial response in the soils there. As the permafrost
melts, bacteria are able to start breaking down organic material that
was previously locked up in ice, producing billions of tonnes of carbon
dioxide and methane. This could catalyse one of the world's most
powerful positive feedback loops: warming causing more warming.
• Four degrees of warming could almost eliminate
the Amazon rainforests, with appalling implications for biodiversity
and regional weather patterns, and with the result that a massive new
pulse of carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere. Trees are
basically sticks of wet carbon. As they rot or burn, the carbon
oxidises. This is another way in which climate feedbacks appear to have
been underestimated in the last IPCC report.