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  News from Nov 06, 2008
  2008/11/06

By The Climate Community | November 3, 2008 | In: Business, Science, Policy, Media, Social & NGOs

http://www.copenhagenclimatecouncil.com/get-informed/news/climate-disasters-a-significant-possibility-says-nobel-laureate-steve-chu.html

Since the IPCC report came out in 2007, new data point to even more alarming scenarios. We underestimate the risk and ignore the fact that the planet is threatened with "sudden, unpredictable, and irreversible disaster," says Steve Chu, one of the world's leading climate and energy experts.

Catastrophic damage to ecosystems because of global warming is "a significant possibility." We can expect "disasters in orders of magnitude different from anything we've experienced thus far," like abrupt, large-scale shifts in the climate system, collapse of ocean circulation and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, and heat waves killing thousands of people. It is most likely that cities such as Tokyo, Mumbai, Buenos Aires, New York, and London must be protected behind sea walls because of rising sea levels and extreme weather.

These are some of the conclusions in an interview published today with Nobel Laureate Dr. Steve Chu, Director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, California. In the interview, the physicist and Copenhagen Climate Councillor evaluates the current scientific knowledge on climate change and the developments since the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report was published in 2007.

His conclusion is that the IPCC report understates the problem, and the rise in global average temperature is very unlikely to be less than 1.5°C and will most likely fall in the range of 2-4.5°C. He adds that due to lack of preventive measures so far, current levels of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere "puts us on track for temperature increases of more than 6.1°C by the end of the century," an increase of catastrophic proportions.

Posted at 06 Nov @ 10:04 AM by Alex Fischer | 0 comments

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