Science
Related: About this forumClimate: Even briefly overshooting 2C will cause permanent damage
The history of climate change is one of people slowly coming to terms with the truth. None but a small minority still question whether its real and caused by humans. Now most grapple with the reality of trying to slow down catastrophic warming, and the difference between solutions and false hope. The concept of climate overshoot is the next thing we will need to get to grips with.
Unless urgent action is taken, emissions are expected to cause the planet to continue heating rapidly over the next few decades, prompting the global average temperature to overshoot the Paris agreements target, which aimed to limit warming to between 1.5°C and 2°C. A period of higher temperatures will occur in the middle of this century as a result. Then, the idea goes, new but yet unproven technologies and techniques for pulling greenhouse gases from the atmosphere will eventually bring temperatures back down to a safer level.
Until now, scientists were unsure what temporarily overshooting (and then boomeranging back below) the Paris agreements temperature target would entail for nature. So, for the first time, we studied the consequences of allowing Earths temperature to exceed these precautionary limits, then fall below them again, for marine and land-based life. In other words, we looked at how damaging the journey of overshooting the 2°C temperature target would be, and not just the destination itself.
The results suggest that a temporary overshoot would cause waves of irreversible extinctions and lasting damage to tens of thousands of species. This is what the world can expect if humanity fails to make deep emission cuts this decade, and relies instead on future technologies to remove emissions later.
https://www.eastmojo.com/environment/2022/07/02/even-temporarily-overshooting-2c-would-cause-permanent-damage/
Eliot Rosewater
(32,535 posts)GLOBAL WARMING take out the people who denied it.
hunter
(38,914 posts)A few million years from now our civilization is little more than a curious layer of trash in the geologic record.
Our biological or intellectual progeny may or may not be around to see that.
We can start making those choices now.
It's most likely we humans are yet another flash-in-the-pan soon-to-be-extinct disruptive species in the long history of earth. But it doesn't have to be that way.