December 6, 2024
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Why ‘tipping point’ is the wrong way to talk about climate change
New paper warns that the concept of ‘tipping points’ does little to help the public and policymakers take action on climate change
Climate Wire | Antarctic ice continues to decline. In the Arctic, permafrost is irreversibly thawing. The cessation of the huge Atlantic current.
Scientists have warned that these and other “tipping points” in the Earth’s climate system are in store if global temperatures continue to rise unabated. However, there remains great uncertainty about when and how the Earth will cross these dangerous thresholds.
And without clearer public communication about what exactly a tipping point is and what can be done to prevent it, the entire concept may be of little use when it comes to accelerating climate action. There may not be.
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it is, new perspective paperPublished Tuesday in the journal Nature Climate Change by a group of scientists, policy experts and communications experts.. They argue that tipping points have captured the public imagination for years, but it is unclear whether the concept has sparked meaningful policy change.
Part of this is due to widespread confusion about what a tipping point actually is, the paper suggests.
Early scientific literature on this topic presented the idea that certain aspects of Earth’s climate system may have physical limits. And once the point of no return is crossed, these systems enter a death spiral of unstoppable and irreversible change.
For example, research shows that sufficient warming and drought in the Amazon could degrade the ecosystem. uncontrollable change From lush rainforests to arid grasslands.
However, as the concept has grown in popularity over the years, researchers have begun applying the tipping point framework to a variety of other scientific and social systems. Papers are beginning to suggest that there is a tipping point in everything from energy pricing systems to human energy. eating habits.
The authors suggest that uncertainty about possible climate tipping points is another source of public confusion.
The United Nations’ leading authority on climate science, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, has warned of: Various possible tipping points in the Earth’s climate system. But some are more likely than others, and many are shrouded in uncertainty. In other words, scientists don’t know how close we are to defeating them.
This makes it difficult to convey the seriousness of tipping point threats and encourage short-term actions to prevent them.
If scientists knew for sure that the Antarctic ice sheet would experience rapid and uncontrollable melting if global warming increased by just 1.5 degrees, policymakers would have to take measures to keep temperatures below that threshold. There may be an increased tendency to take emergency measures.
However, nearly all global tipping point thresholds involve wide uncertainty about when, or even if, it will actually occur.
Rather, more concrete and immediate climate emergencies, such as extreme weather events that are worsening around the world as temperatures rise, are more likely to create a greater sense of crisis among policymakers and the public. the authors argued.
That doesn’t mean tipping points can’t still be a useful concept in public messaging about climate change, the authors added. But scientists need to communicate their definitions and uncertainties more clearly.
That’s because climate tipping points remain a major threat, even if their precise thresholds are still uncertain.
a Last year’s important reports With the help of more than 200 scientists, they warned of 26 potential tipping points on Earth that will affect systems ranging from ice sheets to tropical clouds.
This is an issue that urgently requires further research and understanding, the report warns.
“We know very well that the threat of a tipping point in the Earth system requires an urgent response. In fact, our best models may be underestimating the tipping point risk. There is.” “The world is flying almost blind to this huge threat.”
Reprinted from E&E News Published with permission of POLITICO, LLC. Copyright 2024. E&E News provides news that matters to energy and environment professionals.