National Academy of Sciences :
Action needed to manage climate change risks — new report
WASHINGTON — Warning that the risk of dangerous climate change impacts is growing with every ton of greenhouse gases emitted into the atmosphere, a National Research Council committee today reiterated the pressing need for substantial action to limit the magnitude of climate change and to prepare to adapt to its impacts. The nation’s options for responding to the risks posed by climate change are analyzed in a new report and the final volume in America’s Climate Choices, a series of studies requested by Congress. The committee that authored the report included not only renowned scientists and engineers but also economists, business leaders, an ex-governor, a former congressman, and other policy experts.
“The goal of the America’s Climate Choices studies is to ensure that climate decisions are informed by the best possible scientific knowledge, analysis, and advice, both now and in the future,” said committee chair Albert Carnesale, chancellor emeritus and professor, University of California, Los Angeles.
The new report reaffirms that the preponderance of scientific evidence points to human activities — especially the release of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere — as the most likely cause for most of the global warming that has occurred over the last several decades. This trend cannot be explained by natural factors such as internal climate variability or changes in incoming energy from the sun. The report adds that the impacts of climate change on human and natural systems can generally be expected to intensify with warming.
While it recognized that climate change is inherently a global issue requiring an international response, the committee focused on the charge from Congress to identify steps and strategies that U.S. decision makers could adopt now. A coordinated national response to climate change, which the country currently lacks, is needed and should be guided by an iterative risk management framework in which actions taken can be revised as new knowledge is gained.
“America’s response to climate change is ultimately about making choices in the face of risk,” noted committee vice chair William L. Chameides, dean of the Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Durham, N.C. “Risk management strategies must be durable enough to promote sustained progress yet sufficiently flexible to take advantage of new knowledge and technologies.”
Substantial reductions of greenhouse gas emissions should be among the highest priorities in the national response, the committee said. Although the exact magnitude and speed of reductions will depend on how much risk society deems acceptable, it would be imprudent to delay taking action. The committee cited many reasons for not waiting, including that the faster emissions are reduced, the lower the risks. And because the effects of greenhouse gases can take decades to manifest and then persist for hundreds or even thousands of years, waiting for impacts to occur before taking action will likely be too late for meaningful mitigation. Beginning emissions reductions soon will also lower the pressure to make steeper and costlier cuts later. “It is our judgment that the most effective strategy is to begin ramping down emissions as soon as possible,” Carnesale said.
State and local efforts currently under way or being initiated to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are potentially quite significant but unlikely to yield outcomes comparable to what could be achieved with a strong federal effort, according to the committee. It said the most efficient way to accelerate emissions reductions is through a nationally uniform price on greenhouse gas emissions with a price trajectory sufficient to spur investments in energy efficiency and low-carbon technologies. Having such policies in place is crucial to guide investments in energy infrastructure that will largely determine the direction of greenhouse gas emissions for decades to come.
The committee deemed the risks of sticking to “business as usual” to be a much greater concern than the risks associated with a strong response. Most policy responses could be reversed if they prove to be more stringent than is needed, but adverse changes to the climate system are difficult or impossible to undo. It also said that uncertainty in projecting the severity, location, or time of climate change impacts is not a reason for inaction. On the contrary, uncertainty about future risks could be a compelling reason for taking action given that abrupt, unanticipated, or more severe impacts could occur.
Aggressive cuts in greenhouse gas emissions would reduce the need for adaptation but not eliminate it, the committee emphasized, urging the nation to mobilize now to reduce vulnerability to climate change impacts. While adaptation planning largely occurs at the state and local level, the federal government should help coordinate these efforts and develop a national adaptation strategy.
In addition, the federal government should maintain an integrated portfolio of research programs aimed at increasing understanding of the causes and consequences of climate change and developing tools to limit climate change and adapt to its impacts. The government also needs to take the lead in collecting and sharing climate change information to ensure that pertinent knowledge is used to inform decisions. Public and private sector engagement through broad-based deliberative processes is essential as well. These processes should include transparent analyses of climate change information, an explicit discussion of uncertainties, and consideration of how decisions will be affected by differing personal values.
Because emissions reductions in the U.S. alone will not be adequate to avert dangerous climate change risks, U.S. leadership needs to remain actively engaged in international climate change response efforts, the committee emphasized. If the U.S. pursues strong emission reduction efforts, it will be better positioned to influence other countries to do the same. Given that climate change impacts elsewhere in the world may affect U.S. interests, it would also be prudent to help enhance the adaptive capacity of other nations, particularly developing countries.
The new report builds upon the four previous America’s Climate Choices panel reports: Advancing the Science of Climate Change; Limiting the Magnitude of Future Climate Change; Adapting to the Impacts of Climate Change; and Informing an Effective Response to Climate Change.
The America’s Climate Choices studies were sponsored by NOAA. The National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine, and National Research Council make up the National Academies. They are independent, nonprofit institutions that provide science, technology, and health policy advice under an 1863 congressional charter. Committee members, who serve pro bono as volunteers, are chosen by the Academies for each study based on their expertise and experience and must satisfy the Academies’ conflict-of-interest standards. The resulting consensus reports undergo external peer review before completion. For more information, visit http://national-academies.org/studycommitteprocess.pdf.
Your title is dead right: we’ve heard every word of this before – and we didn’t believe it then, either. This sounds like “just another” attempted iteration of the Goebbels Technique: “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it”. The lie is vast, the repetition incessant, and, sadly, too many people still believe it, which is why this sort of rubbish continues to appear. We still have much work to do.
The committee that authored the report included not only renowned scientists and engineers but also economists, business leaders, an ex-governor, a former congressman, and other policy experts.
FFS! More flaming experts? If mathematics was to become corporeal this committee would be equal to or greater than the square root of stupid…
Anthony,
If they said “The heat generated on this planet has stretched the atmosphere”, then they would have a leg to stand on. But straight CO2? The density is heavier in the atmosphere is all that can be claimed due to the complex interaction many other factors exhibit.
What a bunch of boneheads. The only attributable effect of increased CO2 is global greening, and that is nothing but a plus. On the other hand, every ‘remedy’ they’ve suggested will increase poverty, with 100% certainty. We’ve spent 80+ billion bucks on climate research, and gotten nothing but ambiguous results and a lot of PhD’s.
“It also said that uncertainty in projecting the severity, location, or time of climate change impacts is not a reason for inaction. On the contrary, uncertainty about future risks could be a compelling reason for taking action given that abrupt, unanticipated, or more severe impacts could occur.”
What brilliant logic. “Uncertainty” is a “compelling reason for taking action.” With logic like that you can justify just about anything. They must really think we’re morons.
And for every ton of CO2 we pump into the atmosphere nature pumps 100 tons. So what is their point?
Other than losing me on the “preponderance YAFA YADA”., they also lost me completely on the flippant response to the risk of doing something. It could be turned off, lickety split. If it was possible to stop on a dime, so to say, they would have been able to implement their “remedies”by this time. Once policies, with backing of money, are in place can you imagine the sort of inertia those activities would have built in to undo them; only ivory tower denizens could conjour up this stuff.
Did the report specify exactly what impact these urgent reductions in “deadly” CO2 would have on the climate v’s doing nothing? What’s the temperature difference after say 50yrs and is it in fact measurable?
Only the federal government can save us now.
Keep Smiling 🙂
Jeff
Polar Bears at risk from melting Ice Caps…
These folks must be experts, alright. They think we need to be well informed when we will be making all those “climate decisions”! The report needed to be checked by a psychiatrist before publication; the authors need to be sharing a room with this month’s “Napoleon.”
Just one more “the end is near” report from the CAGW infotainment industry. It was much better when the schoolmarm was blowing up her students.
The NAS should rename itself the NASM. The National Academy of Send Money.
We must act quickly before it becomes clear that we don’t have to act at all.
Huh?
Somebody give the Mad Hatter another cup of tea.
“Because emissions reductions in the U.S. alone will not be adequate to avert dangerous climate change risks, U.S. leadership needs to remain actively engaged in international climate change response efforts, the committee emphasized. If the U.S. pursues strong emission reduction efforts, it will be better positioned to influence other countries to do the same. Given that climate change impacts elsewhere in the world may affect U.S. interests, it would also be prudent to help enhance the adaptive capacity of other nations, particularly developing countries.”
Do you realize this is an admission that they know they are wrong and caught out but cannot say so directly. So they hedge around it by saying they need funding for adaption and for leadership.
In the 19th century big business was often seen as corrupt for having inter-locking Boards and self-serving undisclosed relationships.
Remember that every time we read of these ‘initiatives’ someone is being paid nicely to perform the ‘research’ . The people receiving this money are all related by politics, academic relationship and ideology on AGW.
The corruption of ‘pal review’ is only the tip of the iceberg.
As long as Congress permits and even encourages these self serving groups large budgets which they spend pretty much as they see fit, this corrosive unproductive derivative and misleading work will continue.
What are the requirements to enter the delusional bubble which can so easily reject objective science and reasoned presentation of fact. I think the first must be: leave your intelligence at the door, and the second requires that all truth must be filtered through the conspiratorial lens endorsed by everyone else now resident in the bubble. Oz is just over the horizon.
Ten years ago we moved from the northern US to the southern US with an average temperature difference of plus 16 degrees F. I adapted immediately.
“the risks posed by climate change are analyzed in a new report and the final volume in America’s Climate Choices, a series of studies requested by Congress”
‘ a series of studies’? Requested by what Congress?
Ayn Rand said “The uncontested absurdities of today are the accepted slogans of tomorrow. They are accepted by default.” Write your leaders, talk to your friends, don’t let this propaganda stand!
Thanks to WUWT for speaking out.
The same old stuff, below, copied from the CAGW mantra.
Apparently they did not even update for recent events like huge snowfalls across the US.
In all fairness they did finally drop out the previous claims if increasing frequency and intensity of Hurricanes.
“Changes in climate and related factors have been observed in the United States.
These were recently assessed in Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States23
and discussed in two of the ACC panel reports (NRC, Advancing the Science and Adapting
to the Impacts), and include the following:
• U.S. average air temperature increased by more than 2°F over the past 50
years, and total precipitation increased on average by about 5 percent;24
• Sea level has risen along most of the U.S. coast, and sea level rise is already
eroding shorelines, drowning wetlands, and threatening the built
environment;25
• Permafrost temperatures have increased throughout Alaska since the
late 1970s, damaging roads, runways, water and sewer systems, and other
infrastructure;26
• There have been widespread temperature-related reductions in snowpack in
the northeastern and western United States over the last 50 years, leading to
changes in the seasonal timing of river runoff;27
• Precipitation patterns have changed: heavy downpours have become more
frequent and more intense;28 the frequency of drought has increased over the
past 50 years in the southeastern and western United States, while the Midwest
and Great Plains have seen a reduction in drought frequency;29 and
• The frequency of large wildfires and the length of the fire season have increased
substantially in both the western United States and Alaska.”
“It also said that uncertainty in projecting the severity, location, or time of climate change impacts is not a reason for inaction”
Notice the use of the double negative to create a misleading conclusion. “Not a reason for inaction” does not mean “a reason for action”, or the report would have spoken in the positive.
Dean Acheson, President Truman’s Secretary of State has been quoted as saying
“Don’t just do something, stand there.” This seems a wise choice here.
Is there any new data in this ‘Report’, or is it just another rehash of IPCC agenda-driven conclusions? One also has to ask whether any of these luminaries have actually studied the growing body of evidence that the CAGW (“climate change”) speculation has no empirical basis whatsoever. Do they talk only to each other and read nothing but RealClimate?
It’s frustrating beyond belief to realize that at the highest levels of our scientific and governmental institutions there is no rational nor independent thought taking place.
/Mr Lynn
Maybe the National Science Foundation needs to focus its attention more on something like outreach to Muslims, as NASA is doing!
How about a challenge? Offer post space to any of this report’s authors to come here and defend their analysis and conclusions, on one condition: that this author stick around and debate the evidence with the experts on this board.
I won’t hold my breath. . .
/Mr Lynn