From the National Geographic
New Study Predicts Year Your City's Climate Will Change
New York City and Washington, D.C., will have radically altered climates by 2047.
Photograph by Maartje Geels, Hollandse Hoogte/Redux
Published October 9, 2013
In seven years, inhabitants of New
Guinea could be living in an unfamiliar world, one with a wholly
different climate. A new analysis published today in the journal Nature finds
that by 2020, New Guinea's climate will permanently enter a state never
seen before, outside of the bounds of historical variability and
short-term extremes.
To
put it simply: The coldest year in New Guinea after 2020 will be warmer
than the hottest year anyone there has ever experienced.
The
global analysis also predicts that if greenhouse gases continue to be
emitted at a "business as usual" rate, New York City and Washington,
D.C., will experience radically altered climates in 2047 (plus or minus
about five years for a margin of error). So in about 35 years, even the
coldest monthly dips in temperature on the eastern seaboard will be
warmer than any time in the past 150 years.
"We're
providing a new metric on when ongoing climate change will lead to
environments like we have never seen before," lead researcher Camilo Mora
of the University of Hawaii told reporters, "when the coldest year of
the future will be warmer than the hottest year in the past."
The study's authors refer to this new metric as a "climate departure."
By
combining data from 39 different climate models, Mora and his team
built a timetable of these climate departures for any given location on
Earth. Along with their study, Mora and his colleagues published an
interactive map that allows users to find the year of climate departure
anywhere on the globe.
Identifying the Date of Climate Departure
The
index uses temperature records from 1860 to 2005 to set the historical
bounds of climate variability, then crunches projections from the 39
climate models to identify a year, specific to any point on a global
map, when the temperatures will shift outside of those historical bounds
for good.
The study actually makes two projections: one
"optimistic" scenario that, in Mora's words, "reflects a strong and
concerted reduction in carbon dioxide emissions"; and one "business as
usual" scenario in which emissions rise unimpeded by international
climate agreements or strong domestic policies in the developed world.
(The dates given so far all refer to this "business as usual" scenario.)
The
average date of climate departure globally is 2047, according to the
more pessimistic model (putting New York City and Washington, D.C.—as
well as Ankara, Turkey, and Kampala, Uganda—right at the global mean).
If greenhouse gases are stabilized at what Mora refers to as an
"optimistic" level (538 parts-per-million of atmospheric carbon
dioxide), the global average pushes back to 2069, but inhabitants of New
Guinea still would experience the climate departure in 2025.
Either
way, say the study's authors, climate departure at some point in the
relatively near future is inevitable. "We hope that this analysis will
bring home the clear message that change is on its way, and that it will
occur soon," said co-author Abby Frazier.
(Read "Rising Seas" in National Geographic magazine.)
Oceans Already Departed
In
addition to the temperature records, the scientists generated climate
departure timetables for other variables, including surface evaporation,
precipitation, ocean surface temperature, and the acidity of the sea
surface.
The calculations for ocean pH were stunning.
Mora and his team found that ocean acidity in 2008 (give or take three
years) already exceeded historic bounds. (A separate study,
conducted by researchers based at Oxford University, recently reported
that the oceans' rate of acidification is the fastest in 300 million
years.)
Lower Latitudes First to Leave the Norm
Climate
scientists often refer to the polar regions as the "canary in the coal
mine" for climate change, as the physical changes in the upper latitudes
are most dramatic and the temperature spikes the greatest.
But
according to Mora, this focus on the startling absolute changes at the
poles paints an incomplete picture. "In fact," said Mora, "our study
shows that the tropics, not the poles, will be experiencing
unprecedented climates first." Why is this? Mora explained that tropical
regions have relatively little variability from year to year, whereas
the Arctic and Antarctic are subject to much broader ranges of extremes.
Mora
referred to this as a sort of "double jeopardy" of climate change. "The
largest absolute changes are happening at higher latitudes," he said,
but those dramatic temperature increases don't fully break out of the
range of historical extremes. "Unprecedented climate is happening more
rapidly at the tropics."
On average, tropical locations
will reach their climate departures 15 years earlier than the rest of
the world. All of the locations where the impacts will occur
earliest—for instance, under the baseline scenario, New Guinea in 2020,
Jamaica in 2023, Equatorial Guinea in 2024—sit at lower latitudes.
Mora
said that this is particularly troubling for a couple of reasons.
First, the tropics are "home to the greatest diversity of species on the
planet," he said. "These species are adapted to a stable climate, and
thus it's very easy for these small changes to exceed what a species can
tolerate." Past studies have already shown that tropical species like
coral are pushing up against their environmental limits.
Second,
because the world's population is disproportionately concentrated in
the tropics, unprecedented climate conditions will impact a larger
percentage of the world's population.
Study co-author
Ryan Longman, also at the University of Hawaii, pointed out that
"countries first impacted by unprecedented climates are the ones with
the least economic capacity to respond." Added Longman, "Ironically,
these are the countries that are least responsible for climate change in
the first place."
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