Former Coordinating Lead Author of the IPCC
In the previous video, Kevin outlines the differences between the effects of 1.5 vs 2 degrees warming. In this video, Kevin discusses the various emissions scenarios pathways as projected by the IPCC. In doing so, Kevin also elaborates on the multitude of physical threats that accompany these pathways.
In the previous video, Kevin outlines the differences between the effects of 1.5 vs 2 degrees warming. In this video, Kevin discusses the various emissions scenarios pathways as projected by the IPCC. In doing so, Kevin also elaborates on the multitude of physical threats that accompany these pathways.
It is clear climate change is having an impact on the planet, every year climate events seem to get bigger and last longer. An IPCC report highlighted the importance of attempting to limit warming to 1.5 degrees vs 2 degrees. With every incremental increase in temperatures, we see increased hot extremes, more extreme storms, worsening droughts, rising oceans, loss of species, food shortages, health risks and increased poverty and displacement. It is imperative that everyone on the planet attempts to limit and slow down the rate of warming.
Key learning objectives:
Outline how the future of planet Earth might look
Outline the consequences of warming
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The IPCC have assessed how the planet will look in several reports. In its most recent report AR6, the IPCC established a set of future scenarios called Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) to examine how global society, demographics and economics might change over the next century. There are 5 SSPs:
The IPCC then integrated the SSPs with Representative Concentration Pathways (future emissions scenarios) to produce a wide range of possible outcomes.
All scenarios lead to higher global surface temperatures by the end of the century, but there are variances:
The IPCC expects that global warming will surpass 2°C during the first half of the 21st century under the top two scenarios. Given the commitments at COP26 in late 2021, the warming by 2100 is assessed to be about 2.7°C.
The AR6 report emphasised that “Unless there are immediate, rapid and large-scale reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, limiting warming to 1.5C will be beyond reach.”, and because no such reductions are underway or even have prospects, 1.5C will likely be passed by about 2030 to 2032.
The longer we wait to cut the release of greenhouse gases, the more severe and widespread the harm will be. The IPCC’s working group II emphasises 9 major climate risks:
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