More gloomy outlook worries from this NCAR press release: Climate conditions in 2050 crucial to avoid harmful impacts in 2100

BOULDER–While governments around the world continue to explore strategies for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, a new study suggests policymakers should focus on what needs to be achieved in the next 40 years in order to keep long-term options viable for avoiding dangerous levels of warming.
The study is the first of its kind to use a detailed energy system model to analyze the relationship between mid-century targets and the likelihood of achieving long-term outcomes.
“Setting mid-century targets can help preserve long-term policy options while managing the risks and costs that come with long-term goals,” says co-lead author Brian O’Neill, a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR).
The study, conducted with co-authors at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Austria and the Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands, is being published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. It was funded by IIASA, a European Young Investigator Award to O’Neill, and the National Science Foundation, NCAR’s sponsor.
The researchers used a computer simulation known as an integrated assessment model to represent interactions between the energy sector and the climate system. They began with “business as usual” scenarios, developed for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 2000 report, that project future greenhouse gas emissions in the absence of climate policy. They then analyzed the implications of restricting emissions in 2050, using a range of levels.
The team focused on how emissions levels in 2050 would affect the feasibility of meeting end-of-century temperature targets of either 2 or 3 degrees Celsius (about 3.5 degrees or 5.5 degrees Fahrenheit, respectively) above the pre-industrial average.
—–Mid-century thresholds—–
The study identifies critical mid-century thresholds that, if surpassed, would make particular long-term goals unachievable with current energy technologies.
For example, the scientists examined what would need to be done by 2050 in order to preserve the possibility of better-than-even odds of meeting the end-of-century temperature target of 2 degrees Celsius of warming advocated by many governments.
One “business as usual” scenario showed that global emissions would need to be reduced by about 20 percent below 2000 levels by mid-century to preserve the option of hitting the target. In a second case, in which demand for energy and land grow more rapidly, the reductions by 2050 would need to be much steeper: 50 percent. The researchers concluded that achieving such reductions is barely feasible with known energy sources.
“Our simulations show that in some cases, even if we do everything possible to reduce emissions between now and 2050, we’d only have even odds of hitting the 2 degree target-and then only if we also did everything possible over the second half of the century too,” says co-author and IIASA scientist Keywan Riahi.
The research team made a number of assumptions about the energy sector, such as how quickly the world could switch to low- or zero-carbon sources to achieve emission targets. Only current technologies that have proven themselves at least in the demonstration stage, such as nuclear fission, biomass, wind power, and carbon capture and storage, were considered. Geoengineering, nuclear fusion, and other technologies that have not been demonstrated as viable ways to produce energy or reduce emissions were excluded from the study.
—–The 2-degree goal—–
Research shows that average global temperatures have warmed by close to 1 degree C (almost 1.8 degrees F) since the pre-industrial era. Much of the warming is due to increased emissions of greenhouse gases, predominantly carbon dioxide, due to human activities. Many governments have advocated limiting global temperature to no more than 1 additional degree Celsius in order to avoid more serious effects of climate change.
During the recent international negotiations in Copenhagen, many nations recognized the case for limiting long-term warming to 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, but they did not agree to a mid-century emissions target.
“Even if you agree on a long-term goal, without limiting emissions sufficiently over the next several decades, you may find you’re unable to achieve it. There’s a risk that potentially desirable options will no longer be technologically feasible, or will be prohibitively expensive to achieve,” O’Neill says.
On the other hand, “Our research suggests that, provided we adopt an effective long-term strategy, our emissions can be higher in 2050 than some proposals have advocated while still holding to 2 degrees Celsius in the long run,” he adds.
—–Cautions—–
The researchers caution that this is just one study looking at the technological feasibility of mid- and end-of-century emissions targets. O’Neill says that more feasibility studies should be undertaken to start “bounding the problem” of emissions mitigation.
“We need to know whether our current and planned actions for the coming decades will produce long-term climate change we can live with,” he says. “Mid-century targets are a good way to do that.”
The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research manages the National Center for Atmospheric Research under sponsorship by the National Science Foundation. Any opinions, findings and conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Fast breeder reactors are the only long term solution to electricity production in the future. These systems either molten salt or HTGR systems will be able to provide ongoing fuel into the future for hundreds if not 1000 years. Unfortuantely we are getting into the reactor systems a little late because a system of fast breeders is necessary to grow the additional systems. Time is running out.
We might be able to harness fusion in that time by using uranium shells around the fusion systems to produce the final power. Big bucks systems though. Fusion before fast breeders is unlikely. Fusion itself is unlikely.
Besides the increasing CO2 is the most likely the result of global warming, not the cause, so long term energy supply (hundreds of years) is the driving force to get away from fossil fuels, not AGW.
These foolish models are mere pathetic posturing. As Lorenz showed in 1964, “sensitive dependence on initial conditions” (the Butterfly Effect) makes extrapolating complex dynamic systems –those of three or more interacting variables– a mathematical impossibility (Newton’s gravitational “three-body problem” reflects this issue). Moreover, thermodynamic Conservation Laws render any global “greenhouse effect” physically impossible as well: Heat dissipates from “open systems” such as Earth’s atmospheric envelope, while “closed systems” tend to thermal equilibrium, necessarily a cooling rather than a warming process.
Mathematically and physically, Climate Cultists’ warped AGW hypothesis (not a theory, which requires proof) thus represents willful ignorance at the very least. But as Samuel Johnson said, “Such stupidity, sir, is not in nature”– the method in this madness is a recklessly disruptive partisan-political agenda allied with corrupt, rent-seeking poseurs chasing public monies to the unprincipled exclusion of all else.
Reports as of January 11, 2010 (Monday) project that 67,000 needless deaths may occur in Britain alone due to Warmists’ brutal neglect of due precautions. Death-eating Luddite sociopaths of collectivist Statist bent applaud this “cull,” which Ehrlich, Holdren, Singer and their ilk in the U.S. have sought since the late 1960s– always exempting themselves from consequences of their homicidal folly. Anti-DDT, anti-Green Revolution, anti-coal, oil, nuclear energy supplies: Any life-enhancing means to peace and prosperity is anathema to these nihilistic would-be Commissars and Gauleiters. No wonder Islam’s ultimately atavistic, reactionary Salafists and Wahabis have such quietist appeal.
As a “dead sun” presages a 70-year Maunder Minimum, Earth’s current 12,250-year Holocene Interglacial Epoch is decades if not centuries overdue for a 102,000-year cyclical resurgence of Pleistocene Ice Time. Nothing whatever that humanity can do will hasten or retard this inevitable catastrophe one whit. But continuing to mouth Warmist drivel in prima facie violation of mathematical and physical reality, despite mounting empirical evidence, signifies monomaniacal mass-delusion on a scale unique in human history.
Will mega-deaths speak only silence, or will Warmists’ long-suffering intended victims rise in self-defense to sweep these hateful dolts away? Unfortunately, it may already be too late.
Climate “Science” has got to be a wonderful career. You can say whatever you want, right or wrong, about something that will happen half a century from now. Most who will hear such predictions won’t be around by then and the “scientist” making the prediction will have retired or died of old age. Talk about a gravy train and waste of tax dollars.
I predict that within 200 years there will be a large cascadia earthquake.
I vote we dam the Bering Strait to test the model.
vboring:
“The first commercial scale (fusion) plant is planned to be in service within a decade or so.”
Really???? What Star Trek episode to you get that from?
They can’t even get a tokamak or the JET to run for more than .5 seconds.
So the Bering Strait acts as a valve to regulate cooling/warming? Sweet.
kadaka (16:05:08)
Polywell fusion? You mean this? It’s so deep in military funding I doubt it’ll ever see civilian use, if it does work. It looks like there is a better chance the weaponized version will be stolen and used against civilians, before it gets used to generate electricity for civilians.
Come on, look at the funding for it. It’s being kept alive with dribbles from the Stimulus Bill. I don’t see that leading to a working reactor anytime soon. The project has now become “jobs saved or created,” and not much else.
I would recommend you view this video of Dr. Bussard speaking at Google in late 2006.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1996321846673788606#
It is illustrative of a number of things. Dr. Bussard claims the physics of his design have been dealt with and all that remains at this point is the complex but utterly doable engineering of the prototype generator. What is also interesting, and sadly indicative that political influence of scientific funding is damaging far beyond the field of climate research, is his story of trying to maintain his efforts while flying under the radar of the Tokomak community, which would have squelched it if they ever became aware of his successes.
He was forced to do his work on an absolute shoestring for this type of work, including robbing magnetrons from $99 microwave ovens. If a more rational and less compromised system of grant distribution had been in place 20 years ago when he began his efforts and he had been able to acquire even a significant fraction of the funding that has been squandered on wind turbines, solar panels and Tokomaks, we would in all likelihood be already fielding working systems.
Of course it is still possible that his ideas won’t work, but the patents are privately held and if they are proved functional, someone will build these things. As Dr. Bussard suggests if it’s not us, the Chinese are fully capable and given our present political leadership they seem much more cognizant of and desirous of profits, which will be available in abundance to whoever pulls this off.
Two comments:
First, guesses that far in the future give them time to get control of the trillions of dollars that they want before anyone sees that it is all junk science (trying to prevent man-made warming) and it is too late to complain. The other is that we would be much better off to assume that the changes are natural and figure out a way to live with them rather than try to change what is likely impossible. (even if we were the cause)
I’ll say it again. I support climate research. It is very important. What I don’t need is the BS coming out of our universities. Politicians, get a clue.
Help! I am so confused. What does the first paragraph:
“Scientists are unraveling a chain of events that led to large-scale warmings and coolings across the Northern Hemisphere during past ice ages. As ice sheets expanded……”
above have to do with the Press Release?
Or is it’s meaning that we are way beyond the land bridge -> northerly Atlanatic flows -> melting ice -> warming temperatures and have finally arrived at the fateful tipping point? And now is when I should hold my breath so as not to be responsible for the final CO2 molecule that sends us all spiraling towards Venus?
Aren’t we on track for the “drastic cuts” scenario when we are in a “business as usual” reality wrt IPCC scenarios cited above?
I need to get to a place 100 miles away in one hour. If after the first half hour I am only 40 miles into my trip, I have to cover 60 miles in the next half hour. dah
I didn’t need a degree or research grants to work that out, but they did?
Useless bunch of PARASITES living off the back of my hard earned taxes.
To think that I wanted to be a scientist when I was a kid.
Polywell, yay! It’s a very long shot but imminently bootstrappable if it does. If not, then fast breeders are definitely the way to go with far more concentrated waste and more total energy per unit of fuel than the crude once through process we use now. Got plenty o’ thorium too if we want to go that route.
This comment may get snipped but if it doesn’t everyone will enjoy this old joke about modeling:
Q: How are simulation and self manipulation alike? A: Do them both often enough and long enough and you start to think they’re real.
Sound familiar?
lowercasefred (13:54:36) :
As far as their simulations go – GIGO.
GIGO implies that the output will be correct whenever the input is correct. Will someone please explain how the models were validated?
As we already know, a random number generator applied to CRU AlGorithms suspiciously outputs … wait for it… a hockey stick!
The model output shown in the graphic is clearly bogus. You can tell from eyeballing it for a fraction of a second. It defies physics.
Thorium reactors sounded like the best Manhattan Project type of option out there, with fusion coming some time after thorium, in no hurry since unlike uranium/plutonium, there are thousands upon thousands of years of thorium available that will not result in massive nuclear waste problems. It’s indeed an engineering problem I believe, due to corrosive molten fluoride salts, but much less of a problem than fusion. And in the very short term, small factory-assembled reactors could easily replace dozens of windmills at a time. It’s something I’d look more into if I found some truly captivating books about it rather than blog entries.
“long-term options viable for avoiding dangerous levels of warming.”
What about dangerous levels of cold? I bet more people have died this winter from extreme cold, than from all the “global warming” of the last 30 years.
ITER is not the only fusion energy concept in development. ICF is also under development. NIF is scheduled to achieve the energy balance breakeven point late 2010. The biggest hurdle after that will be engineering the setup to allow for rapid repetition shot rate needed for energy production. That will probably be a $100billion+ research effort but compared to the cost of what they are trying to impose via the global warming hoax its a drop in the bucket. Do a little research on Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) and the National Ignition facility (NIF). If we get serious about it and invest the multi-billions there instead of with the AGW fallacy we just might have a reactor by 2050. Won’t get anywhere close thou at a mere $1billion a year for research effort.
Dave Wendt (17:14:24) :
I would recommend you view this video of Dr. Bussard speaking at Google in late 2006.
And I might take up your recommendation, if I wasn’t on dial-up.
Got transcript? PDF file maybe?
As usual “its worse than we thought!!!”
Lets get the models right first before you start using them for planning purposes, I would not design flood defences using a river model that cannot replicate the observed flow for a given rainfall event, why do they try it with climate models???? As an engineer its hard to fathom!
Jack Hughes (14:33:19) :
Modeling to the second degree. This means you get a first degree in Media Studies then get your second degree in Applied Playstations.
That could come in handy. Read this from November 25 2009:
The US Air Force plans to buy a whopping 2200 PlayStation 3 games consoles which it will use to expand an existing PS3-based supercomputer.
The current cluster of consoles contains 336 PS3s, each connected by their RJ45 ports to a common 24-port Gigabit Ethernet hub, Air Force online documentation states.
The entire set-up runs on an in-house developed Linux-based OS.
However, the expanded PS3 supercomputer will be used to further the Air Force’s “architectural studies” which “determine what software and hardware technologies are implemented [in] military systems”.
(…)
PlayStations for modeling. Yup, truth is stranger than fiction.
Hollywood style press release. Sometimes i wonder if it doesn’t get boring to do these arbitrary announcements. Maybe they’re not working at all. Just sleeping under their desks and whip up a set of slides when new funding needs to be secured. Gimme that job any time.
If I were to create a model.
Would I ignore all the complex high power variables, (clouds are constant) and instead focus on insignificant trace variable(s).
I would if I just wanted to BS my political boss.
Climate models are a “wicked problem” and are really tough if you got your phD from a cereal box!
“As far as their simulations go – GIGO”
Amazing pile!
RE: Fusion
I believe that the University of Florida is working on cold fusion using something like hydrogen and boron? Demonstration plant possible within 10 years?
Ahh that brings back a few memories!
I once applied to do a modelling course.
They turned me down though.
Something to do with sticky out ears, buck tooth and legs like a billiard table.
Fond memories indeed.