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![]() by Staff Writers Exeter UK (SPX) Jan 08, 2019
The latest climate models and observations offer unprecedented opportunities to reduce the remaining uncertainties in future climate change, according to a paper published in Nature Climate Change by a team of 29 international authors. Although the human impact of recent climate change is now clear, future climate change depends on how much additional greenhouse gas is emitted by humanity and also how sensitive the Earth System is to those emissions. Reducing uncertainty in the sensitivity of the climate to carbon dioxide emissions is necessary to work-out how much needs to be done to reduce the risk of dangerous climate change, and to meet international climate targets. The study, which emerged from an intense workshop at the Aspen Global Change Institute in August 2017, explains how new evaluation tools will enable a more complete comparison of models to ground-based and satellite measurements. As lead author Veronika Eyring of DLR in Germany explains, "we decided to convene a workshop at the AGCI to discuss how we can make the most of these new opportunties to take climate model evaluation to the next level". The agenda laid-out includes plans to make the increasing number of global climate models which are being developed worldwide, more than the sum of the parts. One promising approach involves using all the models together to find relationships between the climate variations being observed now and future climate change. "When considered together, the latest models and observations can significantly reduce uncertainties in key aspects of future climate change", said workshop co-organiser Peter Cox of the University of Exeter in the UK. The new paper is motivated by a need to rapidly increase the speed of progress in dealing with climate change. It is now clear that humanity needs to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide very rapidly to avoid crashing through the global warming limits of 1.5C and 2C set out in the Paris agreement. However, adapting to the climate changes that we will experience requires much more detailed information at the regional scale. "The pieces are now in place for us to make progress on that challenging scientific problem", explained Veronika Eyring.
![]() ![]() A 'pacemaker' for North African climate Boston MA (SPX) Jan 03, 2019 The Sahara desert is one of the harshest, most inhospitable places on the planet, covering much of North Africa in some 3.6 million square miles of rock and windswept dunes. But it wasn't always so desolate and parched. Primitive rock paintings and fossils excavated from the region suggest that the Sahara was once a relatively verdant oasis, where human settlements and a diversity of plants and animals thrived. Now researchers at MIT have analyzed dust deposited off the coast of west Africa over t ... read more
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