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FAMED CLIMATE SCIENTIST HAS A NEW, DIRE PREDICTION


SOME SCIENTISTS QUESTION THE NEW STUDY, WHICH ASSERTS THAT EARTH IS WARMING
FASTER THAN PREVIOUSLY ESTIMATED

By Kasha Patel
and 
Shannon Osaka
November 2, 2023 at 3:32 p.m. EDT

National Disaster Response Force personnel distribute relief material to flood
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Thirty-five years ago, NASA climate scientist James Hansen stood in front of
Congress with a bold declaration: Humans are causing an increase in greenhouse
gas emissions, and it’s changing our climate. Some scoffed, but, in the decades
that followed, people saw how prescient this warning was.


Sign up for the Climate Coach newsletter and get advice for life on our changing
planet, in your inbox every Tuesday and Thursday.ArrowRight


On Thursday, Hansen and colleagues across the world released a study with
another serious, though controversial, finding. Climate change will catapult
global temperatures into crisis territory earlier than previously thought, the
scientists said, warning that Earth is already nearing average temperatures more
than 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial norms. Their alarming prediction —
that the pace of Earth’s warming is accelerating — stirred some disagreement
within the climate community.



“The 1.5-degree limit is deader than a doornail,” Hansen, now a director at the
Earth Institute at Columbia University, said in a call with reporters Thursday.
“In the next several months, we’re going to go well above 1.5C [Celsius] on a
12-month average. ... For the rest of this decade, the average is going to be at
least 1.5.”

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Since the preindustrial era, Earth has warmed around 1.2 degrees Celsius. But
recently, temperatures have spiked beyond that. Some summer months in 2023 have
registered global average temperatures 1.5 to 1.6 degrees hotter than the
average before the widespread use of fossil fuels.

While 1.5 degrees isn’t a magical tipping point for Earth’s demise, the United
Nations has warned of severe and potentially irreversible consequences above
that level. Many staple crops wouldn’t be able to grow in such warmth. Even the
best water conservation practices wouldn’t combat the projected droughts.

Scientists have long disagreed on exactly how much global temperatures will rise
with additional atmospheric carbon dioxide. An early study in 1979 estimated
that doubling carbon dioxide in the air would cause global increases of 1.5 to
4.5 degrees Celsius. More recently, the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change calculated that the Earth could warm by 3 degrees with a doubling of CO2.

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But those may be underestimations, the new study found. Hansen and his
colleagues analyzed paleoclimate data and the Earth’s energy imbalance to
estimate that doubling carbon dioxide could lead to a whopping 4.8 degrees of
warming compared with the preindustrial era.

Under the current trajectory of greenhouse gas emissions, they predicted that
the 1.5-degree benchmark will be passed in the 2020s, and 2 degrees of warming
will be passed before 2050 — a markedly faster rate than the prognosis from
other scientists. In its most recent landmark climate report, the United Nations
stated global temperatures would reach the 1.5-degree mark in the early 2030s.

Hansen and his co-authors attribute the rapid warming pace partly to a reduction
in aerosols — or particles of pollution in the atmosphere. Some types of
pollution reflect the sun’s rays, cooling the planet; as countries clean up
their energy systems, cutting down on that pollution can counterintuitively
create a warming effect. The new paper suggests that cutting pollution from
marine shipping may be causing the Earth to absorb more solar radiation.

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The team estimated a global warming rate of 0.18 degrees per decade from 1970 to
2010, but the scientists say the pace will increase to at least 0.27 degrees per
decade during the next few decades.

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“The two-degree limit can only be rescued with the help of purposeful actions to
affect Earth’s energy balance,” said Hansen at the news conference. “We will
need to cool off Earth to save our coastlines, coastal cities worldwide and
lowlands while also addressing the other problems caused by global warming.”



Not everyone agrees with the new study. Michael Mann, a professor of earth
science at the University of Pennsylvania, posted a lengthy critique of the
paper on his personal website.

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“The standard is high when you’re challenging scientific understanding,” Mann
wrote. “And I don’t think they’ve met that standard, by a longshot.”

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Mann argued that the ocean’s heat content is growing steadily, but — in contrast
to Hansen and his co-authors — is not accelerating. Mann also cited data showing
that there does not appear to be a sudden shift in pollution from aerosols over
the past few years. Other researchers have found that a decline in aerosol
pollution from cleaning up shipping would only shift global temperatures by 0.05
or 0.06 Celsius.

“While I hold James Hansen to be one of the most (if not the most) important
contributors to our modern scientific understanding of human-caused climate
change, I feel that this latest contribution from Jim and his co-authors is at
best unconvincing,” Mann wrote.

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The new study also suggests a path forward for policy — an unusual move for most
scientific papers. For decades, scientists have avoided providing any policy
prescriptions for dealing with the problem of climate change, preferring to
stick to science and data. But in recent years, that has begun to change.

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Hansen and colleagues call for a rising price or tax on carbon emissions,
subsidies for renewables and nuclear power, and global cooperation on climate
goals. They also suggest further research into solar geoengineering, a technique
that could cool the planet by injecting particles into the atmosphere to reflect
the sun’s light.

In the press call, Hansen also called for further political action from young
people and others galvanized by the overheating planet.

“I believe a political party that takes no money from special interests is
probably an essential part of the solution,” he said. “Young people should not
underestimate their political power.”

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