Third in a 3-part series | Part 1 | Part 2
by David Spratt
So far this series has looked at:
- Emissions trends
- The 1.5°C target
- Overshooting and cooling back to 1.5°C
- The likelihood of achieving the 2°C target
- 2°C degrees is not a point of system stability
- We are heading towards 3°C or more
- System-level change and tipping points are happening faster than forecast
This post looks at cascading risks, climate extremes and necessary actions.
8 Risks are cascading, and underestimated
Climate system feedbacks can drive abrupt, non-linear change that is difficult to model and forecast, with the Earth moving to dramatically different conditions. Such changes may be irreversible on relevant time frames, such as the span of a few human generations. Major tipping points are interrelated and may cascade, so that interactions between them lower the critical temperature thresholds at which each tipping point is passed.
Climate models do not yet incorporate key processes, and therefore are deficient, especially when projecting abrupt change, system cascades, and changes in the cryosphere and in the carbon cycle. Whether it be permafrost, Greenland or West Antarctica (and hence sea-level rises), the story is the same. Current climate models are not capturing all the risks, such as the stalling of the Gulf Stream, polar ice melt and the uptick in extreme weather events. Thus Earth system and Integrated Assessment Model projections, and their use in determining carbon budgets, are not reliable. It is important that observations, semi-empirical models, expert elicitations, and lessons from past climates are given more weight, given current model deficiencies.