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February
2, 2007 Evidence presented
in the first
phase of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's 4th Assessment
Report,
released today in Paris, paints the clearest picture yet that
human-derived
greenhouse gases are playing a significant role in observed global
warming,
says a Duke University scientist who co-authored one of the report's
main
chapters. "We are now seeing,
not
merely predicting, effects of greenhouse warming on a scale and in ways
that
were not observable before," said Gabriele Hegerl, associate research
professor at Duke's "When you look at
the
changes in temperature, circulation, ocean warming, arctic sea ice
reduction
and glacial retreat together, it paints a much clearer picture that
external
drivers, particularly greenhouse gases, are playing a key role," she
said.
"As a result, we can be much more confident that 20th century climate
changes were not just linked to natural variability." Hegerl was a
coordinating lead
author of the IPCC report's chapter on "Understanding and Attributing
Climate Change." Francis Zwiers of the Canadian Centre of Climate
Modeling
and Analysis was also a coordinating lead author of the chapter. IPCC assessment
reports are
issued every five to six years to provide a comprehensive review of the
current
state of knowledge on climate change. The 2007 report will be issued in
four
phases during the year. The first phase, released today in THE IPCC operates
under the
auspices of the United Nations Environmental Programme and the World
Meteorological Organization and draws on the expertise of about 2,500
scientists worldwide. Hegerl and her
chapter's team of
co-authors were charged with reviewing the evidence of changes observed
so far
and assessing which changes can be attributed to greenhouse gas
increases and
other external influences on climate. In the chapter, they look at the
actual
measurements of climate and weather changes and compare them with
predictions
made for the 20th century by sophisticated computer models. "We've studied
improved
observations from land, sea and space, as well as better temperature
reconstructions covering the last 1,000 years," Hegerl said. By
comparing
observation against modeled projections, she says scientists are
gaining a
better sense of which external climate influences have been important. "Understanding the
observations is really what this all is about. For instance, looking at
the
patterns of change in 20th-century temperatures, we can now distinguish
between
changes caused by greenhouse gases, man-made aerosols, variability in
solar
radiation and major volcanic eruptions," Hegerl said. "We can also
better understand which changes in the more distant past were caused by
external influences of climate, such as volcanic eruptions, and how
strong the
variability of the climate system is. "One of the most
fascinating
things is that we see that changes have already happened or are
happening now
in more climate variables than just temperature," Hegerl added. "For
instance, there have been observed changes in ocean temperatures,
global
rainfall and in circulation of the atmosphere. We now are beginning to
understand that these changes occur at least partly in response to
anthropogenic influences on climate. This allows us to better evaluate
model
simulations, which do simulate aspects of these changes, although not
as
successfully as they simulate changes in temperature," she said. "There are still
things,
like ice-sheet melting, that the models don't do very well yet. But
overall,
the predictions and uncertainty ranges of future climate change are
becoming
much better understood and much more credible," Hegerl said. The IPCC report
"hits the
nail squarely on the head," she said. "It gives a very balanced view
of the evidence for climate change, predictions of future change, and
the
remaining uncertainties, and it draws input from very large number of
scientists
worldwide." The report went
through several
phases of review, giving individual experts and governments opportunity
to
comment. "There were many steps that ensure that the report is both
scientifically rigorous and balanced," Hegerl said. "The information in
the
report will be very important to develop effective policies to address
global
climate change and to prepare for the change that is coming our way,"
she
said.
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